SCOTTISH ARMS" UEING
A COLLECTION OF ARMORIAL BEARINGS A.D.
Reproduced
1370-1678
in Facsimile
from Contemporary Manuscripts
WITH HERALDIC AND GENEALOGICAL NOTES \ By
R.
R.
/
STODART.
VOLUME SECOND.
EDINBURGH: WILLIAM PATERSON i88i.
<*:
\M
r
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
7
kept the Marches between England and Scotland for about three hundred years, and did homage to the Kings of England for the lands they held in Northumberland. The Earls made grants of land to the Church at Durham, Coldingham, Melrose, and Kelso, &c., and generally sealed the charters conveying the lands with the figure of a knight on horseback, fully armed, having a drawn sword in the and a shield either on the left arm or right hand, suspended from the neck each Earl intending the mounted figure on his seal to be a of the representation of himself. Many charters, with the impressions of the Earls' seals still attached to them, are preserved to this son day. Gospatric's IV. "GosPATRicus COMES FRATER DoLFiNi," sccoud Earl, in 1 1 15 " " appears second of the seven Earls of Scotland who gave assent [" assensum proebeo "] to the foundation charter granted to Scone by ;
—
Alexander I., and he is styled " Gospatric de Dunbar " by David I., and " Gospatricus Comes " by Henry the Earl. He is represented on his seal having a short shield, and his horse is standing or walkto sinister. He died between the 26th December 1135 and the ing i6th August 1 139. His son V. " Gospatricus comes filius Gospatrici comitis fratris Dolfini," third Earl, founded the Nunnery of Coldstream. He is represented on his seal having a very long shield, his horse is walking to sinister. His secretum is an antique gem subject a man milking a goat. He died in 1166. His son " VI. " Waltheuus or " Waldeuus comes," fourth Earl [Waltheof in English, Guall6ve in French], is represented on his seal wearing a conical helmet with nasal his shield is suspended from his neck, his horse canters to sinister. The " Chronica de Mailros " records his
—
—
—
;
;
death
—
" anno
m°.cMjcmj°.
*****
^Dljut ©aalDeuuji corner De minbar."
—
His son VII. " Patricius comes filius Waldeui comitis," fifth Earl, married in 1 184 Ada, daughter of William, King of Scotland. His seals show a lion rampant on his shield, his horse gallops to sinister. On " Patricius comes his seals and in his later charters he styles himself de Dunbar." His secretum is an antique gem subject the head of a lady in profile. After having held the Earldom for fifty years, he resigned in favour of his son, and died 31st December 1232. His son VIII. " Patricius comes de Dunbar," sixth Earl, granted charters dur;
—
—
" Patricius filius Patricii ing his father's lifetime, styling himself One of these charters was confirmed on the Comitis de Dunbar." His seals show a lion 30th November 1222 by Alexander II. After he rampant on his shield, his horse gallops to sinister. succeeded to the Earldom, his seals on the 14th and i8th April 1248 (&c.) show a lion rampant on his shield, and his horse gallops to dexter; secretum on a triangular shield a lion rampant. In con-
—
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
8
firming the charter of the 14th, Alexander II. on the 20th April 1248 " Patricium Comitem de Dunbar nepotem nostrum." The styles him Earl used another secretum an antique gem subject a standing He joined the Crusade of Louis IX. of France in 1248, and figure. dying the same year, was succeeded by his son Patrick, seventh Earl. William, younger son of the fifth Earl. Seal on or before the 30th
—
—
November 1222
—a lion standing
;
—
over a Wyverrt that is seizing secretum an antique gem subject
—
its
—
a throat, both to sinister mounted figure, the horse gallops to sinister. " IX. "Patricius comes de Dunbar, seventh Earl [sometimes Patricius Comes filius Patricii fil. patricii Comitis de Dunbar"]. Seal, upon the 4th November 1261, on a shield a lion rampant surrounded by thirteen roses in the spaces between the shield and the legend are On the 29th May 1279 his seal dexter a serpent, sinister a dragon. his horse him on horseback, gallops to sinister he has a represents lion rampant on his shield, and above his helmet a crescent as crest. He used several other seals like this last one of them has a cross over the crescent; although the cross is smaller than the letters of the inscription, it happens to be at the beginning of the legend, and may be meant for the cross generally placed in that position. Secretum on a triangular shield a lion rampant contournd. Another secretum an antique gem He died 24th a lion seizing a stag. subject August 1289, and was succeeded by his son Patrick, eighth Earl. " Alexander filius Comitis de Dunbar, miles," younger son of Patrick, seventh Earl, on the 21st September and 26th November on a shield 1288, and 7th June 1289, sealed receipts for his fee with a lion rampant within the Royal tressure between the shield and the legend on each side are two roses or stars. Lady Cecilia Dunbar, daughter of Patrick, seventh Earl, married about 1290 James, High Steward of Scotland her son Walter, the High Steward, married, in 1315, as his second wife, Margaret, daughter of King Robert Brus, and their son became Robert II. consequently Lady Cecilia Dunbar's forefathers were ancestors of H. M. Queen ;
;
;
;
;
;
— —
—
—
;
;
;
Victoria.
X. " Patricius de Dunbar, Comes Marchie," eighth Earl [sometimes "Patricke de Dunbar, Counte de la Marche"], was one of the claimants of the Crown. Seal, 5th and 6th June 1291, on a shield a lion rampant within a bordure charged with eight roses. In July he was 1300 present at the siege of Caerlaverock. The Roll of the " " him Conte de Laonois [Earl of Lothian], and blazons siege styles
—
his arms, " Gules a lion argent within a bordure of the last, with roses of the field." He seems to have been the first to style himself "Earl of March." He died loth October 1308, aged sixty-six. His son
—
XL
"Patricius de Dunbar, Comes Marchie," ninth Earl [subsequently also fourth Earl of Moray] in July 1300, when sixteen years of age, was present with his father at the siege of Caerlaverock, and bore gules a lion argent within a bordure of the last, with roses of the ;
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
9
On the 6th April 1320, he was field, and a label azure for difference. one of the Scottish barons who sent the letter to the Pope, and he sealed .with on a shield a lion rampant within a bordure charged with eleven roses. He married his cousin. Lady Agnes Ranulph,
—
daughter of Sir Thomas Ranulph,
first
Earl of Moray.
As
Scotland
was then under interdict, the marriage was solemnised in England and afterwards. Pope John XXII. granted a dispensation for it on ;
" i6th January 1323-4. Patricke de Dunbar, Counte de la " Marche upon the 13th May 1334 sealed with on a shield couchd, a
the
—
rampant within a bordure charged with thirteen roses, crest on a helmet between two demi-lions gardant, a tower embattled, issuing lion
therefrom a lady with flowing hair vested, holding in each extended hand a coronet supporters two wild hairy men visible to the waist; below the shield a dragon. The lady may be intended for the Earl's mother, who defended Dunbar Castle in 1296, and the two coronets " " " may be intended for Dunbar and March." This seal appears to be earlier, by eleven years, than any other connected with Scotland, on which either a crest or supporters are associated with family arms. After the 17th October 1346, Earl Patrick assumed the additional " " title of Moray in right of his wife. On the 24th May 1367 " Patricius de Dunbar, Comes Marchie et Morauie," " apud Castrum nostrum de Dunbar," appended to a charter his secretum and what
—
;
he called " sigillum nostrum magnum." Representations of them are given in H. Laing's "Ancient Scottish Seals," Vol. II., Plate I., Nos. I and 2. In both these examples the bordure is charged with eleven roses. After having been in harness about sixty-seven years, and after having held the earldom fifty-eight years, he resigned in favour of his son George his resignation was confirmed by David IL on the 25th July 1367. Earl Patrick seems to have survived some ;
"
years.
Agnes Comitissa Marchie et Moravie,"
the
celebrated
" Black
Agnes of Dunbar," wife of Patrick de Dunbar, ninth Earl, successthe English fully defended her husband's castle of Dunbar against At the death of her for nineteen weeks in the spring of 1338. third Earl of Moray, on the 17th October 1346, she succeeded to his great estates, including Annandale and the Isle of Man, upon which she and her husband assumed the additional " her seal to she the
brother,
title
John Ranulph,
of
Moray."
On
her husband's charter
;
seal
appended May 1367 —24th four shields disposed as a
cross, the base
points meeting in the centre on the upper shield is a lion rampant within the Royal tressure on the dexter and lowest shields a lion rampant within a bordure charged with eight roses for Dunbar on ;
;
;
the sinister shield three cushions within the Royal tressure for Ranulph in each of the four spaces between the shields is a coronet ;
over a rose.
The Chapter of Dunbar. Seal— under
a Gothic canopy a lady, having a scourge in her right hand and a book in her left upon each side is ;
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
lo
rampant within a bordure charged with eight roses, the dexter shield having over all a label of five points below the The Collegiate Church of Dunbar was figure is a monk kneeling. founded on 24th February 1342-3 by Patrick de Dunbar, ninth Earl, possibly on the birth, or at the instance, of his eldest son, which may account for the label on the dexter shield. In 1392 some change was made in the establishment. The workmanship of the seal seems on a shield a
lion
;
to be of the later date. '*
" miles, et Isabella sponsa ejusdem appended their seals to a charter on the 2nd January 1351. Dexter seal on a shield a lion rampant within the Royal tressure sinister seal on a shield a lion rampant within the Royal tressure, impaling three [square] cushions within the Royal tressure. Dunbar seems to have been the lady's maiden name, from the fact of the legend on her seal being " Sigillvm Isabelle de Dvnbar " (all the
Patricius
de Dunbar,
—
—
letters are precise
;
and
perfect).
Both the tressures on the
sinister
shield are entire, neither of them being cut by the impaling line, which differ from the examples, sixty years earlier, on the Indenture
between Florence, Count of Holland, and Robert Brus, dated 14th June 1292. [" National MSS. of Scotland," Part II., No. vi.] XII. "Georgius de Dunbar, Comes Marchi^," tenth Earl, Seals, 27th March 1371 and 4th April 1373, on a shield couchd, a lion rampant surrounded by sixteen roses crest on a helmet, a horse's head bridled issuing from a coronet, showing three long and two short points, each terminating in a fleur-de-lis or cross supporters two lions sejant gardant coud, before two trees. He held the earldom and died in 16. His son 14 forty-eight years, XIII. " Georgius de Dunbar, Comes Marchie," eleventh Earl, Seal on the 9th December 1424, on a shield couchd, a lion rampant within a bordure charged with eight roses crest on a helmet, a horse's head bridled issuing from a coronet, showing three long and two short
—
;
;
—
—
—
;
—two
points, each terminating in a fleur-de-lis or cross supporters lions sejant gardant coud, both having one fore-foot holding ;
the
coronet, behind each a
tree. This Earl, although instrumental in the release of obtaining James I. in 1424, was nevertheless attainted on the loth January 1434-5 for his father's rebellion, which had
taken place thirty-four years previously. Lady Elizabeth Dunbar, daughter of George, tenth Earl, was contracted to marry the Duke of Rothesay [eldest son of Robert III.], whose disregard of his engagement drove her father into rebellion in 1400, and brought attainder on her brother in 1434-5. CoLUMBA DE Dunbar, M.A., BiSHOP OF MoRAY, SOU of Gcorgc, tenth Earl,
was Dean of Dunbar in 1411, and was provided to the See of Moray by Pope Martin V. on the 3rd April 1422. On the outer wall of the Cathedral at Elgin, above the great window which is over the western door, there are three coats of arms, which were probably placed there by Bishop Dunbar when the Cathedral was rebuilt after the great
fire.
1st,
ARMORIAL DE GELRE. centre— on a shield a rampant within
in
tressure, for
—on
n the Royal
lion
James
I.,
King
of Scotland
;
2nd, a
little
lower to dexter
a shield three pillows within the Royal tressure, for Thomas Dunbar, Earl of Moray; 3rd, to sinister on a shield couchd a lion rampant within a bordure charged with eight roses, behind the shield a pastoral staff in pale, for Bishop Columba de Dunbar, being
—
arms and
"
baculum pastorale." The Bishop died in his palace at and was buried in the Dunbar aisle in the Cathedral Spynie at Elgin part of the mitre remains on the head of his effigy which is upon his tomb there, and a small shield which is on its breast above the robes shows traces of a lion rampant within a bordure. Sir David Dunbar of Cockburn, said to be a son or grandson of George, tenth Earl. Seal, 12th December 1452, on a shield couchd, his
in 1435, ;
—
a lion rampant within a bordure charged with eight roses or stars crest on a knight's helmet, a horse's head issuing from a coronet, showing four long and three short points.
;
Dunbar of Kilconquhar and [Mochrum]
Loch, according to Sir David Lindsay's MS., bore gules, a lion rampant argent within a bordure of the last, charged with eight roses of the field. These Dunbars were descendants and heirs male of the attainted Earl of March, and the Marquis of Bute was supposed to be their heir of line but Lord Bute, who takes an interest in such matters, having investigated the case, is satisfied that he is not the heir of line. XIL John Dunbar, Earl of Moray, fifth Earl, younger son of Patrick, Earl of March and Moray, by his wife " Black Agnes," married [Dispensation of Pope Urban V., dated nth July 1370] his cousin Marjorie, daughter of Robert, then High Steward and shortly afterwards King of Scotland. On the 9th March 1372-3 her father, Robert " IL, gave a new grant of the Earldom of Moray to Our chosen son John of Dunbar and to Marjorie his spouse, our dearest daughter," and to the heirs of their bodies, whom failing, to George Dunbar, Earl Earl John's seals, 4th April of March, and his heirs whomsoever. within the Royal tresthree cushions &c. on a shield couchd, 1373, crest on a helmet, a stag's head and neck issuing from a sure ;
—
;
showing five points supporters— two each having one fore-foot holding the coronet. coronet,
;
lions sejant gardant,
He
died before the
23rd July 1393.
"The Lady
Marjorie," wife of John Dunbar, fifth Earl of Moray, and daughter of Robert H. Seal, ist May 1390—on a shield a lion rampant within the Royal
XHL
tressure.
Thomas Dunbar,
sixth Earl of Moray, son of Earl John. Seal, ist May 1390 [during his father's life] on a shield couchd three cushions within the Royal tressure, a label of three points for difference crest on a helmet, a stag's head and neck issuing from a coronet supporters two lions sejant gardant. On the 22nd November 1396
—
;
;
—
he used the same seal with the three years previously.
label,
although his father had died
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
12
Lady Euffame Dunbar, daughter
of Earl John, married Alexander 28th May 1408.] Thomas Commyn, of Alter, Cumyne. [Indenture, who seems to have been their son, sealed upon the 7th September 1476, with on a shield couchd two [square] cushions in chief, a garb in base, within the Royal tressure; the cushions and tressure apparently for his mother. XIV. Thomas Dunbar, seventh Earl of Moray, son of Thomas, sixth on a shield three Earl, used a seal two inches in diameter in 1422 within the This tressure. seal pillows appears to be the Royal original from which was copied the coat of arms on the dexter shield, above the window over the western door of the Cathedral at Elgin. He seems to have died between 1427 and 1442. His cousin XIV. James Dunbar, eighth Earl of Moray, son of Alexander Dunbar of Frendraught, and grandson of Earl John, is said to have been mur" the late Earl of Moray," on the 26th April dered, and was called
—
—
—
1442.
Lady Jonet Dunbar, daughter of James, eighth Earl, styled herself " Countess of Moray" on the 28th September and 8th October 1454, when widow of James Crichton, and during the lifetime of her brother-in-law Archibald Douglas, also in 1455, '58, '70, etc. and sealed with on a shield quarterly, first, three cushions within the Royal tressure for Dunbar, Earl of Moray second, a lion rampant
—
;
;
third, a saltire and chief fourth, a fess chequd between three roses for Eraser of Frendraught. But in a resignation to the King, on the 2nd October 1462, she styles herself simply " Jonat de Dunbar Dfia de frendraucht."
for Crichton
;
;
Lady Elizabeth Dunbar, daughter
of James, eighth Earl, and wife of Archibald Douglas; seal 22nd February 1449, on a shield quarterly, first and fourth, three cushions within the Royal tressure for DunEarl of second and ermine a man's heart, and on bar, third, Moray
—
;
a chief three stars for Douglas. On the 19th May 1455, when widow of Archibald Douglas, " Pretensus Comes Moravie," she styled her" self Countess of Moray," at the same time that her sister was assuming the
title.
XV. Sir Alexander Dunbar of Westfield,
Knight, son of James, eighth Seal on a shield Earl, signed a reversion on the 8th March 1488. a bar between three cushions within the Royal tressure; crest couchd, on a knight's helmet, a [wolf's?] head. He died loth March 1497-8. His effigy, on his tomb in the Dunbar aisle, in the Cathedral at Elgin, has three cushions on its breast.
—
Isabel, widow of Sir Alexander Dunbar of Westfield, and daughter of Alexander Sutherland of Duffus seal on the 12th June 1502, on a shield two [oblong] cushions in chief, a star in base.
—
;
Sir James
Dunbar
Westfield,
of
Cumnock, Knight,
married
21st
eldest son of Sir
Alexander of
Euphemia, eldest daughter and co-heir of Patrick Dunbar of Cumnock and Mochrum Sir James appended [supposed offshoot from the Earls of March]. [charter,
June 1474]
his seal
ARMORIAL BE GELRE, 13 —on a shield a rampant— the marriage contract of his lion
to
who
married Alexander Innes of that ilk, [condaughter Christian, tract 4th December 1493]. Sir James was the first heritable sheriff of Elgin and Forres [charters, 26th and 27th May He died 1498]. 20th April 1504. His wife Euphemia survived him.
Beatrice
Dunbar, of Cremond.
Seal,
—
4th
[square] cushions within the Royal tressure, fess point for difference.
Sir John field,
Dunbar
of
Mochrumpark, second son
married Margaret, second
Dunbar
of
September 1497 three a boar's head couped in
of Sir Alexander of West-
daughter and coheir of Patrick
Cumnock and Mochrum
[charter, 21st
June
He
1474].
married, secondly, Jonet Stewart [charter, 13th March 1497]. Archibald Dunbar of Baldoon, son of Sir John's second marriage, is represented by Dunbar Douglas, Earl of Selkirk. Gavin Dunbar, Archbishop of Glasgow, younger son of Sir John's second marriage, on the 8th July 1524 was "provided" Archbishop to
On the 21st August the See of Glasgow by Pope Clement VH. of On the 29th July Chancellor Scotland. he was 1528 appointed High " in 1538, at the request of King James V., he received Inchaffray commendam
"
from Pope Paul HI.
—beneath
a canopy St and a his a fish in pastoral staff in his right hand, Kentigern holding left in the lower part of the seal are Archbishop Gavin Dunbar's arms on a shield three pillows within the Royal tressure, a crozier in pale behind the shield. Secretum the same arms with crozier in He died 30th April 1547. The pale, and a fish below the shield. Archbishop is often confused with his uncle Gavin Dunbar, who was ;
—
Seal
—
Bishop of Aberdeen from 5th November 1518 till 9th March 1531-2. Sir John Dunbar of Mochrumpark, who seems to have been grandson of the above Sir John's first marriage, sealed in 1564 with on a
—
He died loth December 1578, leaving five had married her cousin, daughters coheirs, of whom the eldest, Grisell, shield three cushions.
Alexander Dunbar younger of Conze, fear of Mochrumpark, "
17th November 1564]. Dunbar of Mochram," emblazoned—argent
[contract,
three cushions within the
has
been Royal tressure, a star in fess point for difference, gules, added [evidently an afterthought] to Sir David Lindsay's MS., possiabove marriage. bly at the instance of a descendant of the north-west the corner, upon the Mochrum Castle, now a ruin, has at north gable on a shield a pillow between the initials I. D. in chief, And upon a more modern part of the ruin on in base. two
—
pillows a shield three [square] cushions. Alexander Dunbar of Kilbuiack, third son of Sir Alexander of
—
West-
seems to have been married, about 1480, Janet Sutherland, who His eldest soudaughter of John, seventh Earl of Sutherland. and 31st October 1545, James Dunbar of Conze, on the i8th August 1526, sealed with—on a shield three pillows, a star in fess point for difference. for his mother, as the modern system of difThe star was field,
probably
'
ARMORIAL BE GELRE,
14
son seems to have been unknown in ferencing with a mullet for third the north of Scotland at that time. George Dunbar of Asliesk, Heritable Mair of Moray, younger son of of Conze, built the Castle of Asliesk, and on the centre stone,
James
" over his fireplace in the Hall," he placed the date 1587, and in relief on a shield three cushions, with a chevron humetty in fess point for difference and his initials G. D. in base impaling a chevron, differenced by a crescent between three stars and the initials M. A. in base, for his wife Margaret, daughter of Anderson of Chapelfield and
—
;
;
;
The chevron humetty was probably for George's mother, These arms Brodie, second wife of James Dunbar of Conze.
Pittenseir.
Isobel
were repeated over the castle door, and below them, on the same stone, were those of Alexander Dunbar, elder son of George of Asliesk. On a shield three
and
initials
cushions
;
impaling three garbs,
for
his
wife Jonet,
daughter of
of Alter [marriage contract, 30th December 1583]. Alexander predeceased his father at midnight, 31st May 1600. George died 13th August 1607, and was buried in his son's grave. Arms upon their tombstone between their initials on a shield three
Thomas Cwmyng
—
cushions.
Mr
James Dunbar
of Newtoun, younger son of George of Asliesk, lost his first wife, Margaret Mackenzie, grand-daughter of the Earl of Arms upon her tombstone, Athol, on the 12th December 1604.
—
Mr
between their initials on a shield three cushions, a stag's head and neck couped in fess point for difference [instead of impalement], Patrick Dunbar, twenty years Rector of Duffus, younger son of Patrick
Dunbar
tombstone —on
of Conze died 28th
August
1629.
Arms upon
his
a shield three cushions impaling ermine a man's heart, and on a chief three stars for his wife, Elspet Douglas, who seems to have been daughter of James Douglas of Dipill. Gavin Dunbar, Bishop of Aberdeen, fourth son of Sir Alexander of Westfield, Archdeacon of St Andrews, and Clerk Register, was provided to the See of Aberdeen by Pope Leo. X. on the 5th November It was Bishop Dunbar who had the Cathedral at Aberdeen 1518. On ceiled with wood, and the ceiling decorated with coats of arms. an illumination in one of the Cathedral books, his arms are emblazoned between two bears but the Bishop does not seem either to have used or to have had right to supporters. He died on the 9th March His arms three pillows within the Royal tressure are on 1531-2. his seals and, with the addition of a mitre and his initials, are on the Old Bridge of Dee, and on the canopy of his tomb over his effigy " in Bishop Gavin Dunbar's Aisle," in the Cathedral at Aberdeen. The Bishop is often confused with his nephew, Gavin Dunbar, who was " provided " to the Archbishoprick of Glasgow on the 8th of July 1524, and died on the 30th of April 1547. David Dunbar of Durris, fifth son of Sir Alexander of Westfield, died His son 23rd February 152 1-2. ;
;
—
—
;
—
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
15
Alexander Dunbar
of Durris, like his first cousin, James Dunbar of Conze, sealed in 1526 with— on a shield three pillows, a star in fess point for difference.
Mr
The
star
was probably
for his mother. Neither nor of his forefathers for four hundred Alexander, any years before him, was a third son. Patrick Dunbar, Chancellor of Aberdeen and Caithness, sixth son of Sir Alexander of Westfield. Died 8th September 1525, leaving descendants, among whom are said to have been the Dunbars of Bennetfeild or Benagefeild.
Alexander Dunbar, ant of
Mr
Prior of Pluscarden,
Patrick.
The
Prior's
son —
is
supposed to be a descend-
Patrick Dunbar of Sanquhar, styled himself " Baron of Sanquhar," and, on the 8th September 1568, gave a charter to his wife Elizabeth, daughter and coheir of Ogilvy of Durn. Seal, two inches in diameter!
—on a
shield three pillows.
Mr John Dunbar of Bennethfeild
died 2nd
December
His wives.
1590.
Mar. and Issob. Dunbars, died 3rd November 1570 and 4th December 1603. His son Nicol died 31st January 1651, and Nicol's wife, The above is recorded on a Griss. Maver, died 21st July 1648. the Dunbar into the west wall of built stone, Aisle, in the Cathedral at Elgin. Above the inscription are two shields; on the dexter shield are three cushions impaling three boar's heads erased the impaling line extends through the chief only, and three buckles in relief, slightly This suggests that possibly in bend, are between the lower charges. the mother of Mr John's first wife may have beeij an Urquhart, and that the mother of his second wife may have been a Leslie. On the sinister shield are three cushions, impaling a star in chief, a crescent in base probably for Nicol Dunbar and his wife Grissel Maver. ;
—
John Dunbar
of Bennethfeild, and his wife
Agnes Mackenzie,
alive 17th
marked
their burial place by an inscription, on a tablet May 1629, built into the south wall, inside the only aisle now remaining, of the
Cathedral of Rosemarkie at Fortrose. Above the inscription between On a shield three cushions impaling a their initials are their arms stag's head cabossed, a star between the attires. David Dunbar, Dean of Moray, on the nth January 1555 gave to his son, Alexander Dunbar of Craighead, a charter of the lands of Boath, and on the 24th July 1556 a charter of Petwhyn. Seals on a shield three cushions within the Royal tressure [the Dean's official
—
Mr
;
—
seal
Mr
?]
Alexander Dunbar, Sub-chantor and Dean of Moray [son of a former Dean Alexander], also styled of West Grange and Burgie, one of the Senators of the College of Justice, married [contract, loth February 1561] Katherine Reid, sister-german to Walter Reid, the last Abbot of Kinloss, and niece of Robert Reid, Bishop of Orkney, who was formerly Abbot of Kinloss. The Dean's official seal, ist
—on a
September 1586
He
died 13th July
shield three cushions within the Royal tressure. See Robert of Burgie his third son. 1593.
1
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
6
Mr Thomas Dunbar
of West Grange, Dean of Moray, second son of Mr Alexander, married Grisel, daughter of Mr Robert Crighton of Arms between their iniEliok, advocate [contract, nth July 1591]. on a shield three pillows, one and two in chief; a lion rampant tials
—
impaling quarterly, first and fourth, a lion rampant; second and third, three crowns. Above the shield, instead of a crest, is a cherub's head between two wings displayed. Supporters, two ducks' are for supporters]. not meant heads erased, [but possibly they Alexander Dunbar of West Grange, son of Mr Thomas, married first in base;
—
John Campbell of Cawdor [contract,
Jean, daughter of Sir
ith
i
March
and secondly, Jean, daughter of Sir Alexander Cockburn of 1624] Langton [contract, i6th May 1632]. Below the arms of his father and mother already described, upon the same stone, are, between inion a shield three pillows, one and two in chief a tials, his arms ;
—
;
impaling three cocks for his second wife, Jean rampant Cockburn. Supporters two ducks' heads erased. [A repetition of the in base
lion
;
—
above].
Robert Dunbar
of Burgie, Subchantor of Moray, third son of Dean Alexander, had on the centre stone over his fireplace at Burgie, within a garter, between the letters A. D. on a shield party per fess three
—
a roebuck's cushions, two and one below the letter M. in chief head between the letters K. R. in base being the arms and initials ;
;
of his father and mother, Mr Alexander Dunbar and Katherine Reid and below, outside the garter, R. D., his own initials all the above ;
;
This Robert Dunbar
in relief; the date, 1602, is cut into the stone.
—
of Burgie married first, in or before 1609, Isobel, daughter and coheir of Sir John Sharpe of Houston, Knight, advocate. Upon a stone at Burgie is a monogram of their initials, R.D.I.S., and below
—
impaling a dexter hand holding a dagger. Under the shield is the date 162 1 all in relief Sir Robert Dunbar of Grangehill, Knight, married Grisell, daughter of Alexander Brodie of that ilk. Arms above their initials, and the date 1666 on a shield three cushions impaling on a chevron, between three birds, as many stars crest on a helmet, a wreath of laurel ; supporters dexter a greyhound, sinister a boar. Archibald Dunbar of Newtoun and Thundertoun. Seal on the 8th July 1670 on a shield, quarterly, first and fourth, a lion rampant for Dunbar second and third, three cushions for Ranulph above the shield are his initials A.D. His elder son Robert Dunbar of Newtoun and Thundertoun, succeeded 3rd May one a lion rampant; the other on a shield 1689, and used two seals three cushions, a buckle in fess point for difference. Helmet, mantland wreath, no crest. The buckle from the arms of his mother, ing
on a shield three cushions
—
;
—
;
—
;
—
—
:
—
;
—
—
Elizabeth, youngest daughter and coheir of Walter Hacket of Mayen her arms were on a shield tierced fessways first, a lion passant second, on a bend three buckles, the centre one being on a raised
—
shield
;
third, three piles.
;
:
The
;
buckles were probably placed on the
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
17
Racket coat for her mother Janet, elder daughter of George Leslie of Burdsbank, grandson of George, fourth Earl of Rothes. The centre buckle may have been placed on a raised shield, because Janet Leslie's mother, Margaret Stirling, daughter of the Laird of Craigbarnet, also bore three buckles.
Mr Archibald Dunbar Newtoun.
James Dunbar
Seal —a
of Thundertoun, younger son of Archibald of
lion
of Boath.
rampant.
Seal, 1681,
helmet, mantling, and wreath
—on a
no
;
crest.
shield three cushions, with Above the helmet are his
L D. Alexander Dunbar initials,
of Westfield, Heritable Sheriff of Moray. Seals, October and on a shield three 24th 1692 19th September 1693 on a shield quarterly, first and cushions, and on the 26th May 1701
—
—
fourth, a lion
rampant within a bordure charged with eight roses second and third, three [square] cushions within the Royal tressure helmet and mantling; crest on a wreath, between the -words Sub Spe, a dexter hand apaumde reaching at two earls' coronets tied ;
—
;
—
supporters two lions rampant. Sir James Dunbar of Mochrum was created a baronet on the 29th March 1694 by King William IIL, who assigned to him, in his patent, two white doves Imperially crowned for supporters, with Candoris prcBmiiim honos for motto. This seems to be the only known instance in Scotland of supporters being granted in a patent of baronetcy. together
;
Alexander Dunbar
of Bishopmill, upon his chimney-piece, between initials and the date 1696 on a shield three cushions impaling on a
—
;
cross indented, between four roses, a crescent in fess point, for his wife,
Margaret Aytoun.
Elizabeth Dunbar, only daughter of Sir William Dunbar of Hempriggs, Bt., married, as his second wife, and survived. Sir Robert Gordon of Gordonstoun, third Baronet. In 1705 she placed above his tomb, over their initials on a shield quarterly, first and fourth, the arms of the Earl of Huntlie second and third, the arms of the Earl of Sutherland, for her husband impaling first and fourth Dunbar, second and third Ranulph, for herself. The dexter and sinister halves of the shield have each over all on a shield the arms of a Nova Scotia baronet; crest—a cat sejant mottoes dexter, Sanscrainte; Sub spe ; supporters dexter, a greyhound; sinister, a sinister, savage holding a club. Robert Dunbar of Grangehill. Seal, 28th January 17 16 three pillows within the Royal tressure, helmet, wreath, and mantling; crest a
—
;
;
— —
—
;
—
—
—
head erased; motto [under the shield] Sub spe; supporters dexter, a greyhound sinister, a boar. [The impression is broken in fess point, where there may have been a difference.] LuDOVic Dunbar of Moy succeeded, on the death of his cousin Robert, to the representation of Westfield, and to the heritable sheriffship of Elgin and Forres. Seal, i8th April 1721 a lion rampant. Although lion's
—
;
—
£
1
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
8
the sheriffship had been two hundred and twenty-six years in the family, he sold it to the Earl of Moray in 1724 for ^^2000. The Rev. Thomas Dunbar [one of the Westfield family], Vicar of Kelve-
Essex, was buried in the chancel of the church there, 7th February 1728. Arms upon his tombstone on a shield quarterly, crest ^a dexter first and fourth Dunbar, second and third Ranulph hand apaumde reaching to two earls' coronets tied together. The Dunbars in Holland, descended from Dunbar of Windyhills, bear, three [square] cushions, each of the upper ones supported in his forepaws by a lion combatant gardant helmet, mantling, and wreath
don
in
—
;
crest
—
—
;
;
2i
[square] cushion.
In conclusion, the matriculations of Dunbar Arms, recorded in the Lyon and Ulster Registers, speak for themselves. Had space permitted many more Dunbar coats might have been added, and references to the originals of all the above examples, with the legends of each seal and secretum, would have been inserted. " It seems necessary to remark that, in A System of Heraldry," " by Alexander Nisbet, Gent," published in 1722, there are several erroneous statements about the Arms of the Dunbars, and at page 273 there are mistakes in the blazon of the Dunbar Coat unfortunately all the errors are repeated in the second edition, published in 1804. ;
Ranulph. Thomas Ranulph.
—an antique gem.
The
[Liber de Melros, vol.
Appendix.] the
It
Seal
shield three pillows secretum pillows are squares pendent by the corners. No. 5, attached to No. 23 ii., plate HI.
was probably
same or a similar
Lady Dervorgoyle.
—on a
seal in
this
Thomas, or
;
his father,
who used
1292, as one of the executors of the
—
Thomas Ranulph. Seal on a shield three cushions within the Royal tressure. The cushions are tasselled and pendent by the corners. The shield is surrounded by compartments. In each of the four a lion rampant. Sir Thomas Ranulph, Knight, was created Earl of Moray, with remainder to the heirs male of his body, by King Robert Brus, his mother's No. 264 of the " Regisbrother, on or before the 29th October 131 2. " trum Episcopatus Moraviense records the grant, which is undated. The Earl also styled himself " Dominus Mannie et Vallis Anandie." Froissart's MS. records that the Earl bore ''Argent a trots oreilles de guelles." Froissart probably had the authority of eye-witnesses, and wrote about a century and a-half before Sir David Lindsay's time. Some of the printed English editions, including that of 1525, " reproduce the blazon as above, but where the word oreilles'' is translated, it is invariably rendered "pillows'' Upon the death of his uncle Robert I., on the 7th June 1329, the Earl became Regent of Scotland, and he died on the 20th July 1332. Thomas Ranulph, second Earl of Moray, succeeded his father, and was principal divisions there
is
ARMORIAL DE GELRE. killed three
weeks afterwards
August 1332. John Ranulph,
third
at the battle of Dupplin,
Earl of Moray,
"
19 on the 12th
Dominus Mannie
et
Vallis
Anandie," succeeded his brother. Froissart records that his arms were " Argent a trots oreilles de guellesr The Earl was killed at the battle of Neville's Cross on the 17th October 1346. With him all the heirs male of the body of the first Earl failed, and the estates
were inherited by his
Lady Agnes Ranulph,
sister,
the celebrated " Black
Agnes of Dunbar," wife of Patrick Dunbar, Earl of March, ninth Earl [see page 9]. " Ranulph," almost invariably thus spelt in old charters and on seals, is often erroneously spelt 'Randolph" in modern days. Neither Queen Elizabeth's minister Randolph, nor an English family of the name
[Hasted's Kent: Canterbury, 1790, vol. iii., p. 64], appear to have any connection, either by arms or descent, with the Scottish Ranulphs. Earl of Kincardine. Arms of the Isle of Man at this time held by
William Montacute, Earl of Salisbury. There was no Earl of Kincardine till the seventeenth century. Earl of Orkney. Arms of Sinclair William Sinclair did not become Earl of Orkney till 1379, and at this time Erngisl Suneson was titular earl, his deceased wife having been daughter and coheir of Earl In 1364 Thomas de St Clair was ballirus regis Norvagie in Malise. ;
Orkney. Ross. Arms of Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, who married Euphemia, Countess of Ross, 1382. John Edmonston. Sir John of that Ilk, 1359-81. The crest a camels head the Ednam family bore two camels as supporters and on a " Law and Practice of stone at Duntreath, c. 1600, engraved in Seton's Heraldry in Scotland," the shield of Sir James of Duntreath is repreMr Laing describes the sented as resting on the hump of a camel. in 1470 as a horse's (?) Duntreath of William the seal of Sir on crest head issuing from a ducal coronet and at a later period a swan's head and neck was used, also issuing from a coronet.
Earl of
;
;
;
PLATE
C. t
Jean de Lindsay. (?) Sir John of Craigie and Thurston, whose daughter and heir, Margaret, married Wallace of Riccarton. Henri de Preston. Sir Henry afterwards of Formartin.
Alexandre de Ramsay of Dalhousie. David de Lindsay, afterwards Earl Robert
of Crawford,
1398, son-in-law of
II.
The genealogy of the house of Lindsay has been
so well illustrated in the by the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres, its present learned chief, " Lives of the Balcarres," that it is almost unnecessary here to do
more than
refer to that
work.
ARMORIAL DE GELRE,
20
Walter de Lindsay was
county of Roxburgh early in the twelfth century: his descendants soon divided into several branches, produced a chancellor, bishops, two chamberlains of Scotland in the thirteenth century, and another in the fourteenth. As stated above, they attained to an earldom now the premier earldom of Scotland, and intermarried with royalty and in the next century, David, Earl of Crawford, was Duke of Montrose, 1488. Mr Seton has given in the " Law and Practice of Heraldry in " Scotland a coloured plate showing the differencing of the arms, and settled in the
;
the family having had the good fortune to number among its descendants four Lyon Kings of Arms, figures largely in all the heraldic collections.
The de
Limesi, barons by tenure soon after the Conquest ended in the direct male line on the death of Hugh de Limesi in the reign of King John, his cousin, David de Lindsay, being one of his heirs.
The
bearing of Limesi was an eagle displayed and Segar's Roll gives for Richard de Limesay gules, an eagle displayed or. The early Rolls of Arms in England give various persons with the surname Lindeseie, Lyndeshaye, Lindeseye, &c., bearing or, an eagle displayed sable, the same debruised of a baton compony, azure, and gules or, an eagle purpure, the same debruised of a baton compony, argent, and azure also gules, three eagles displayed or. The seals of Sir Walter and of Simon de Lindsay in Scotland in the twelfth, and of Sir David in the thirteenth century, have an eagle with wings expanded, not on a shield. The earliest strictly heraldic seal is that of Sir Walter, 1292 ^an orle vair this again refers us back to England, where in Charles' Roll and in Glover's Roll there are Walter de Lindesey, gules, an ;
;
;
—
;
orle vair
;
William de Lindeshie, gules, semde of crosslets or an orle and the same in a Roll of the reign of Edward
vair in Charles' Roll
n.
;
de Lyndeseye of the County of Huntingdon. The orle remained as late as 1450 the bearing of a branch of the Scottish house, as shown by the seal of Philip Lindsay of the Haugh of Tannadice. The eagle and baton compony are given in Mr Seton's table for for Sir Gilberd
Lindsay of Wauchopedale. But the Lindsays in the northern kinggenerally adopted a fess checquy the seal of Sir William, in 1293, is described by Mr Laing as ermine three bars, but it may rather be a shield checquy. That of Sir Alexander of Crawford,
dom
;
On the seal of John, Bishop of certainly a fess checquy. are two the one being ermine three bars, or, shields, Glasgow, 1333, as I incline to think, checquy, the other an orle vair debruised of a bendlet. 1304,
is
Sir David of Crawford, 1345, placed the shield with the fess and in Hutton's checquy "on the breast of an eagle displayed " another seal of his is described with the fess within a Sigilla bordure charged^ with eight buckles crest, a key supporters, two ;
;
lions.
;
ARMORIAL DE GELRE, The
21
1371, was a demi-swan, or a swan's head and neck with a wing; to this, in 1390, Sir William of Byres added a coronet, from which the crest issues. crest of Sir
James of Crawford,
The
supporters of Sir Alexander of Glenesk, 1371, were those ever since borne by the elder branch— two lions sejant gardant and in 1488, those of the Earls of on seal the of David, Lindsay appear Lord Lindsay of the Byres, two griffins. In the time of the first Earl of Crawford, was ;
quartered, and the Duke of Montrose added
cheon over
all
—
Abernethy an escut-
for that title
argent, a rose gules.
The swan with the motto "Endure
given in the MSS. of the sixteenth century for the Earls of Crawford, but Pont, in 1624, and later authorities, have an ostrich proper holding a key in its mouth. The ostrich feather here held by the swan as the crest of David de Lindsay is to be seen on the seal of David, Earl of Crawford, forth"
is
1446; and in a MS. of the latter part of the following century, there on either side of the shield an ostrich feather and also as a badge,
is
;
Le
three times repeated, a dog's head with a horse shoe in his mouth. Seigneur Patrick (Hepburn), Sir Patrick de Hepborne, in 1371, appended his seal to the Act settling the succession to the Crown.
Gavthier Lesly. Walterus de The bend ermine and the
Leslie also signed the act of settlement. tinctures differ from those afterwards
adopted.
Le Sire de Keith.
William de Kethe appended his seal to the same Act, but Mr Laing describes the crest as a stag's head the stag's head is on seals in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and was ;
always borne by the Earls Marischal. There is a seal of Sir Robert Keith, Marischal of Scotland, 13 16, with the chief paly of six, but earlier seals of the family for instance that of Adam de Keth appended to a deed of homage to Edward L,
—
—
1292, are not heraldic.
George, Earl Marischal, d.s.p. 1778, and in 1782 George Keith of Northfield, was served heir male of his ancestor. Sir Robert, Great Marischal of Scotland he descended from the second son, the eldest being the first Earl Marischal. After this he assumed the style of Marischal. Robert Keith, Bishop of Fife, and Primus of the Epispopal Church in Scotland, had, about 1750, written a "Vindication" of the claim of his grand-nephew, Robert, to the succession in opposition to Keith of Ravelston, setting forth his descent from Alexander Keith, ;
who had
a charter of Pittendrum and Pitblae in 1513 from his father, William, Earl Marischal. Robert, who was Lieutenant-Colonel of the 3rd Foot Guards, d.s.p. 1780, when his cousin, Katherine Keith, widow of Stuart Carmichael of Bonnington, was served heir general
him
she was the only child of Bishop Keith. George of Northfield left a son James, C-aptain in the 117th Regiment, who, d.s.p. 1799, when his sister Katherine, wife of Robert
to
;
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
22
Gentleman, Surgeon of the 13th Regiment of Foot, was served heir general.
In
1
80 1 Alexander of Ravelston,
co.
Edinburgh, and of Dun-
being the historical seat of the Earls Marischal, and acquired by purchase by his father, was recognised by the Lyon King of Arms as heir male, and allowed the chief coat and His present representative is the Rev. William Alexsupporters. ander Keith of Pogbie, in East Lothian, whose uncle, Sir Alexander of Ravelston and Dunnottar, was appointed Knight Marischal of nottar, co. Kincardine, the latter
Scotland, and knighted in 18 19. Bishop Keith, in his "Vindication," altogether denies the pedigree of the Ravelston family. The old seals, except one, have the chief paly of six. Sir David
Lindsay, in both the Keith coats he gives, has argent, a chief paly Soon after, this was changed to a chief gules of six or and gules. charged with three pallets or, and this is the blazon in the Lyon
—
Register.
Gavthier Haliburton. mascles on a bend
—
is
The
seal
Walter de Haliburton three In the Act of Settlement, 1371.
of
appended to
the fifteenth century the Lords of Dirleton quartered three bars for Cameron and a bend for Vaux. William, in 1466, seals with a fess
between two mascles in chief and a man's heart in base. The surname is taken from lands in Berwickshire, and the well-authenticated pedigree goes back to the early years of the twelfth century.
Marjory Douglas, Duchess of Rothesay, married Walter de Haliburton, 1403.
Walter de Halyburton of Dirleton, Treasurer, married the Countess of Ross, daughter of Robert, Duke of for Haliburton of Pitcur. See
W
;
Albany.
Sir Walter Scott was allowed, as heir of line of the Haliburtons of Newmains, to quarter the arms, and took one of the old supporters
—
of the baronial family a moor proper banded and cinctured argent, holding in his exterior hand a flaming torch reversed proper, to be
borne on the sinister side, that on the dexter being the mermaid of " the Scotts he also took the Haliburton motto, Watch weel." Thomas Erskine. Sir Thomas Erskine of that ilk, one of the hostages for the payment of the ransom of David II.; the label is borne because his father, Sir Robert, was alive. Mr Laing describes the seal of that Sir Robert which is appended to the Act of Settlement as a pale crest a griffin's head and wings issuing from a coronet the seal of Sir Thomas, 1364 a pale, with a label of five points crest a griffin's head and wings, with a sprig in the beak supporters two griffins. His younger brother. Sir Nicholas of Kinnoull, 1370, has the pale engrailed as a difference crest a dragon's head and ;
—
;
—
;
;
;
—
;
supporters two demi-savages. The crest on another seal of Sir Robert
wings
;
— —
— is
a boar's head, 1357.
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
23
In the sixteenth century Lord Erskine had as crest a hand holding a motto " Je pense plus " and the supporters were griffins, which supporters were also borne by the Earls of Mar, Earls of Kellie, and Erskines of Dun. Sir John of Dun, a.d. 1400, on his seal, has the pale charged with a cross crosslet fitchde crest a griffin's head issuing from a cutlass
—
;
;
—
;
coronet.
The
seal of Sir Charles of
Cambo, Baronet, Lyon King of Arms, as that the present official arms were not 1668, interesting proving used before 1673, the date on the Lyon Office Seal. It is first and second fourth, the augmentation granted to the first Earl of Kellie and third, the pale charged with a crescent for difference; in an is
;
escutcheon over
— legend Sigillum
all,
Nova
the
Scotia badge
;
crest
—a
Officii Leonis, anno Domini 1663. Several of the Kings of Arms of Scotland sealed
ments with official seal
lions
demi-lion
official
;
docu-
their paternal arms, but Sir James Balfour used an a saltire, and on a chief a fleur-de-lis supported by two
—
rampant
;
legend— Sigii/um
Officii
Leonis Regis
Armorum.
Sir Charles Erskine entered his arms at the beginning of the The arms of office argent, a lyon sejant full-faced gules, Register. holding in his dexter paw a thistle slipped vert, and in the sinister a shield or inescutcheon of the second on a chief azure, a St Andrew's
—
,
;
first, impaled with his paternal bearing quarterly first and fourth gules, an imperial crown within a double tressure counterfiowered or second and third argent, a pale sable as a difference from his brother-german, the Earl of Kellie, a crescent argent in the coeur point crest a garb or banded azure lying on its side, and thereon a cock standing in a crowing posture proper, supported by two sportsmen vested proper, he on the dexter holding a bended bow and arrow, he on the sinister a golf club motto Excutit inde canit. See C and L ii. **"**
cross as the
I
;
\
;
;
;
—
;
'
;
;
PLATE
j
:
—
0-
D.
]
^
%
''*'"'
i
'
Le Sire de Seton, consider myself fortunate in having obtained from the author of The Law and Practice of Heraldry in Scotland," George Seton, Esquire, advocate, than whom no one is better qualified to treat the I
\
"
—
subject, the following notice of his family The Norman family of Say, barons by tenure in England from the reign of William I. to that of John, bore, quarterly or and gules. branch settled in Scotland, and the elder line ended in Sir Hugh, :
A
and heir, Orabilla, widow of Reginald de Warren," made a grant to the Church and Abbot of Scone in 1247. The Setons are believed to descend from that house, and retain
whose
\
]
^
:
sister
\
\
'
the armorial tinctures, while taking for bearings three crescents.
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
24
"
a reason for this assumption, that their ancient territories and lands in East Lothian were formed by the Forth into It is much more probable, howthree great bays like half moons." ever, that, being the symbols of Mussulmen, these charges were
Nisbet
states, as
adopted by the family, as by other Christian conquerors, to commemorate some victory over the Turks or Saracens. Alexander de Setun witnessed a charter by Gillemur, son of Gilleconel, to the
The
earliest
Church of Lesmahagow Seton
in 1144.
seal is that of Sir Alexander,
c.
12 16, bearing
On three crescents and a label of three points. another Alexander Seton, attached to the celebrated letter of the Scottish barons to the Pope in 1 320, the three crescents are placed on a bend. The son and successor of Sir Christopher Seton, ninth of the family on record (who married Christian Bruce, sister of Robert I.), placed the double tressure round his paternal crescents on account of and Nisbet specially refers his royal descent, as on his seal in 1337 to the presence of the tressure in the Seton achievement on the double ground of " maternal descent and merit." It is said that he also obtained from the king a coat of augmentation, viz. ^gules, a the later seal of
;
:
—
sword * in pale proper, pomelled and hilted or, supporting an imperial crown within a double tressure of the last, to perpetuate the services rendered to his country by himself and his progenitors. This
coat,
however,
is
not to be found on any seal used by the
successive representatives of the family, nor does it appear in any known heraldic MS. Sir George Mackenzie mentions that it was
borne in his time (before 1680) and Nisbet, who had the best opportunities of knowing, from personal observation, and because his father had been agent of the Earl of Winton, says that it was to be seen cut in stone on the old house of Seton. George, third Lord Seton, married Lady Janet Stewart, daughter and heir of John, Earl of Buchan, Constable of France, grandson of and on that Robert II., in whose right he claimed the earldom account his descendants have always quartered the feudal arms of Buchan, azure, three garbs or. This assumption is thus referred to in the MS. History of the Cumings of Ernsyde, compiled in 1622 and although the alleged motive is erroneous, the statement forms a curious corroboration of the fact " Being also requisitt to vnderstand y* reasone why y^ Lord Seattoune, now E. of Wintone, weareth in y* six Bear sheawes thrie in everie cross of his bagge I being in the Palace of Seattoune, ffamiliar w*" my old Lord, demandat at his Lo: for what cause the Hous of Seattoune weare y= Cumings' armes in y' maner ? My Lord answered me y' his predicessors gatt the lands ;
;
;
:
—
and lordship of Troup soe,
—
Buchan, fra y^ Earle of Buchane, Cuming as ane tockin of perpetuall band of freindship, y^ Lo: Seattoune, in
* Sir Christopher Seton's two-handed sword, figured in the possession of the writer of this statement.
;
Dr
Wilson's " Archseology of Scotland,"
is
in
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
25
adioyned y« six sheawes to his own armes, q"' remaines w* y* Hous, as memorie of auld kyndnes, and not lands wes y' gevin be alliena°ne to tack any pairt of y<= Cumings' armes and soe, if auld love and kyndnes should be respected, it is ane great motive and occasione to profes a good will and frindship to remaine betwixt the said Surnames." (Quoted in Sir Richard Maitland's " House of att y* time,
y
;
Seytoun," p. 96.) Robert, eighth Lord Seton, on being created Earl of Winton, was allowed an additional coat of augmentation, viz., azure, a star of twelve points argent, within a double tressure flowered and counterflowered or. On a large detached stone in Seton Church, believed to have formerly surmounted the principal doorway of Seton Palace,
Winton arms are sculptured in high relief, the only charges in the inescutcheon being the star and Royal tressure, as on the seal of George, third Earl, in 1608. The /////^W inescutcheon appears on a damask napkin in the possession of the writer, bearing the name of the the full
— John weaver Edinburgh," and exhibiting the armorial ensigns of George, Earl of Winton, under the following —Insignia George IX. de Seton, Comitis de IVinton, Domini legend "
maker
in
Ochiltrie,
fifth
:
Over the shield is an earl's coronet surmounted by helmet, crest, and motto and behind, two batons in saltire, in allusion to the office of Master of the Royal Household formerly held by de Seton,
i']i2.
;
The
supporters hold banners, of which the dexter is charged with the arms of Seton, and the sinister with a circle and triangle interlaced, surrounded by the word Indissoluble, the device adopted by George, fourth Lord Seton, on the ensign of the ship the family.
"
Eagle," which he equipped to avenge himself against an attack by the Dunkirkers. In the four corners are interlaced crescents and other devices, with legends, the whole being within a bordure charged with crescents and fleurs-de-lis. The seal of Robert, Lord Seton, in 1600, presents a variation of
marshalling the crescents of Seton being there quartered with the garbs of Buchan, and the whole surrounded by the Royal tressure. Supporters. While the seal of William, Lord Seton, 1384, exhibits two lions sejant gardant, as supporters, on that of his grandson, George, third Lord, c. 1440, they are represented as rampant gardant. According to Nisbet, George, fifth Lord, who fell at * Flodden, used a mertrick and a lion, but the supporters carried by the Earls of Winton were two foxes (or mertricks), proper, collared and chained or, each collar charged with three crescents gules. In ;
—
the sixteenth century, the collars, as given in the MSS., were gules
charged with Crest.
William de tary
;
five plates.
—The
on the seal of become heredi1400, used a crescent between two
crest given in this armorial appears Seton, c. 1384, but does not seem to have
William,
first
Lord,
c.
" * a four-footed Martin, in his Description of the Western Isles," 1703, says that ""the mertrick, creature about the size of a big cat, is pretty common in the isle of Harris."
G
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
26
plumes of feathers issuing from a coronet, as sculptured on a stone over the south-east door of Seton Church, now almost entirely effaced, but minutely described by Nisbet in a genealogical MS. in the In W. the crest is a serpent gliding among Advocates' Library. Another MS. of the sixteenth century has a crescent foliage.
between two branches, but the established crest of the Winton family was a dragon or wyvern vert, spouting fire, wings elevated, and charged with a mullet argent, issuing from" a ducal coronet. Some" Set on issues from the mouth. times a scroll with the war-cry " " Motto, Zet fordward," or Hazard, zet fordward." Below the shield, " Invia virtuti via nulla (Ovid., Met.," xiv. 113), and on scrolls passing over the middle of the supporters, Intaininatis fulget honoribus
(Hon,
"
Carm.,"
iii.
2,
18).
was used by Roger de Quincy, Earl of WinThe wyvern chester, and is believed by Nisbet to have been adopted by the Setons with the title of Winton, on account of their relation to the crest
family of De Quincy. Of the cadets of this family were Earl of Dunfermline, Lord (i.) Alexander,
—
High Chancellor
of
Scotland, 1605, at whose houses of Pinkie and Fyvie, and also at His Dunfermline, are examples of his taste for heraldic decoration. lordship's mother was Isobel, daughter of Sir William Hamilton of
and
—
cut in several places at Fyvie a fess charged with three cinquefoils, and in base three crescents, all within the double tressure. Afterwards, argent, on a fess gules three cinquefoils of the field, was granted as an augmentation to be borne
Sanquhar
;
their
composed coat
is
second and third quarters for the title of Dunfermline supporters two horses at liberty argent, maned and tailed or. (2.) The Setons of Barns, co. Haddington, bore the sword supporting the imperial crown between their crescents, because, says Sir George Mackenzie, they "got the land which was disponed with the arms." In 1806, Lieut.-Colonel James Seton, representative of was allowed to carry the quartered coat and supporters of the Barns, Earls of Dunfermline as heir male. (3.) The Viscounts of Kingston placed the wyvern, as a coat of augmentation, in the second and third quarters. Meldrum, co. Aberdeen, quartered Mel(4.) The Setons of drum, as descended from the heiress of that family and to Sir Alexander of Pitmedden, one of their cadets, was granted, in 1675, as an augmentation to be borne in the centre of his paternal coat, a man's heart distilling drops of blood and for crest, a banner displayed in bend proper, with the motto " Insignibus astans," on account of his father having been killed at the Bridge of Dee, being shot through the body by a cannon ball, while defending the king's standard. In 1684, the crest and motto were altered to a soldier from the middle " bearing up the royal banner bendways displayed proper, and Sustento sanguine signa," a deerhound and an otter being granted as in the
—
;
;
;
—
supporters.
ARMORIAL DE GELRE. (5.)
Seton of Cariston,
Royal tressure gules
The
;
co.
Fife— or,
in the centre
an
27
three crescents within the head sable for Balfour.
otter's
of this family, John, younger brother of George, seventh Lord Seton, Queen Mary's faithful adherent, charged one of the crescents with a bezant, as on his seal, and also as represented on the roof of Samson's Hall at Seton. The seventh Lord " repaired the forepart of the house of Seton, first
and especially that room called Samson's Hall (40 feet in height), which he adorned with a roof of curious structure, whereupon are twenty-eight large achievements, being those of Scotland, France, Lorraine, and the noble families that were allied to his family, curiously embossed and illuminate the most exact pieces of armories that are to be met with," Nisbet. George, second of Cariston, laid aside the bezant and adopted the
—
—
head for his mother, Isobel Balfour, heiress of Cariston. The family sometimes bore Seton undifferenced and quartered with Balfour gules, on a chevron or, between two otters' heads erased, in chief, and a fleur-de-lis, in base, of the second, an otter's head
otter's
erased of the
field.*
The
late John Riddell remarked that "the house of Seton or account of its great connections and ramifications, besides on Winton, the antiquity of its descent, would seem now to be the noblest in
Scotland." The Earls and Marquesses of Huntly, Dukes of Gordon, Earls of Aboyne, Sutherland, and Eglinton, were all Setons by paternal The Seton coat has always been quartered by the Gordons, descent.
descended from the marriage of Alexander Seton and Elizabeth Gordon, heiress of her family. The Sutherland family also long bore Seton as a quartering, and took the arms of Sutherland alone in the time of the fifteenth Earl.
On
the death, in 1749, of George, the attainted Earl of Winton, the male representation devolved on his cousin Sir George, third
baronet of Garleton, who d.s.p. 1769, and then on Ralph Seton, who died unm. at Newcastle-on-Tyne in 1782. Ralph's nephew, John, last of that branch, died in London, 1796, leaving an only child, Mrs Mary Catherine Broadbent. The Earl of Eglinton and Winton is believed to be the heir
male of the Setons. for Seton of Touch. See Robert Erskine. Sir Robert of that ilk already named the crest differs from those on his seals given by Mr Laing. Jean d'Abernethy. John, younger son of Sir George of Saltoun, in The seals of Alexander de Abernethy, 1292, LauEast Lothian.
W
;
* In Sir David is thus blazoned :— Argent, on a chevron Lindsay's Register, Balfour of Cariston erased of the second, and a fleur-de-lis heads otters' two sable, an otter's head erased of the field, between in base azure.
ARMORIAL DE GELRE,
28
1320, and Sir George, elder brother of this John, the last appended to the Act of Settlement, 1371, all have the ribbon plain the engrailing may be a mark of cadency for the younger son. rence,
c.
;
However, the ribbon in the seal of William, Lord Abernethy, 1535, is described by Mr Laing as showing engrailing. This coat is one of those most frequently to be met with in Scotland, although the surname is not a common one, being quartered by the three coheiresses of the elder
the descendants of
line,
who
married Stewart, Lindsay, and Leslie. "The Frasers of Philorth," printed for private circulation in 1879 by Lord Saltoun, contains an account of this family, which his lordship represents as heir of the marriage in 1596 of Alexander Fraser of Philarth and Margaret, daughter of George Abernethy, Lord Saltoun.
The
Frasers, Lords Saltoun, although inheriting their peerage from the Abernethies, do not quarter the arms and retain the sup-
porters of Fraser.
A crest used
was a demi-falcon rising at other times a crow or a parrot feeding on a bunch of cherries. Jean Stuart. Probably Sir John of Darnley, who died c. 1368; his grandfather. Sir John of Bonkyl, in 1296, sealed with a fess checquy surmounted of a bend. The seal of Alan Stuart, c. 1 190, is the first in
which the
in the sixteenth century
;
fess
checquy appears. Probably the son of Robert IL, who was Earl of Buchan, but was, in 1373, known as Lord of Badenoch. Sire de Sandilans.
Alexandre Stuart.
Le
Anderson.
Annand (?)
Barry of six gules and or
Robert de Colville.
no name, but undoubtedly Drummond. Robert de Colville, of Oxnam and Ochiltree, was ;
the head of the family in Scotland at this time.
PLATE Le Sire de
The bearing
Sinclair.
See
W.
E.
of St Clair of Herdmanston, co.
Haddington, represented by Lord Sinclair.
Le Comte de Fife. Archibaud de Douglas.
Archibald, Lord of Galloway, afterwards Earl
of Douglas.
Mr Laing gives two of his seals, one appended to the confirmaof the Act of Settlement, 1373 arms of Douglas, the field plain tion
—
;
apparently peacock's head and neck issuing from a tower, in the beak an inscribed scroll supporters two savages. The other, when he was Earl, has Douglas in the first and fourth, a lion rampant crowned for Galloway in the second and third quarters, and three mullets for Moray of Bothwell, in an escutcheon of pretence, being the earliest example in Scotland of the arms of an heiress so carried. It ;
crest
^a
;
—
ARMORIAL DE GELRE,
29
has been frequently repeated that this Archibald, Earl of Douglas, married Johanna, daughter and heir of Thomas Lord
of Moray, Bothwell, and in consequence added the three stars of Moray to his arms. This is not the case the seal of William de Douglas, without date, has one mullet the seal of Sir William, in 1296, is three mullets on a chief. :
;
of Godscroft, describes a seal of William in 1259, which he had seen, as apparently three mullets in chief. William, first Earl of Douglas, added the heart, which in appears 1343 on his seal. Mr Joseph Bain, F.S.A. Scot, has discovered evidence showing that married the not the widow, Douglas daughter, of Moray dispensation, July 1 361, for the marriage of Sir Archibald Douglas, knight, of the diocese of St Andrews, and Johanna de Moravia, widow, of the diocese of Glasgow, relict of Sir Thomas de Moravia, knight. There is a charter in 1371 to Sir Archibald and his heirs, of all right to lands, offices, &c., which by the death, without heirs of their bodies, of his wife Johanna de Moravia, might fall to the king. Sir Thomas de Moravia must have been too at the time
Home,
—
young
of his death to be the father of the Countess, and there seems some ground for believing that his wife had been a lady of his own name, and probably a near relative.
Mr
Bain sends
well Church —
"
:
me
the following description of a shield in BothImpaled, dexter side, three stars in chief, and three
body of the shield two and one surrounded by the tressure This seems to indicate a sinister, three stars two and one." in the
;
marriage of two Morays. There is reason to conclude, from similarity of arms and from their proved relationship, that the Moray and Douglas families descend in the male line from a common ancestor.
Le
sire de Comyn.
This is probably the Richard Comyne who had charters from David II., of Develly, with the office of forester of Tarnaway, 1367-8, and of an annual rent from the lands of Carnousie Sir Richard witnessed several charters of the Regent Duke of Albany. The surname is taken from Comines in Flanders Baudouin de Comines went to the Holy Land in 1202, and his arms in the Salle des Croisdes at Versailles are or, an inescutcheon gules charged with a cross vain To this family belonged Philippe de Comines, the historian, who died in 1509, leaving an only child, Jeanne, wife of Rend de Brosse, Comte de Penthi^vre. Another family of the name in Artois, bore or, an inescutcheon within an orle of roses gules when the Armorial G£ndral of France was compiled, 1696-17 10, the name seems to have entirely disappeared from the province where it originated. Robert de Comyn was sent by William the Conqueror to govern Northumberland 1068, but perished the following year when the ;
;
—
—
;
palace of the Bishop of Durham was burnt his nephew, Richard, a baron by tenure as lord of Northallerton, married Hexilda of Athole, ;
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
30
grand-daughter of King Donald Bane, and had a son, William, Earl of Buchan, jure uxpris. William had by his first marriage Richard, ancestor of John Lord of Badenoch, claimant of the crown of Scotland, whose male line ended on the death of his grandson John, 1325; Walter Earl of Menteith, jure uxoris ; and by the second marriage Alexander Earl of Buchan, whose son John, Earl of Buchan, d.s.p. c.
1313Charles's Roll has
—Comin, gules, three
garbs or
;
and Comyn,
A
azure, semde of
estoiles or three garbs argent banded gules. Roll of the time of Edward II. gives for Sir John Comyn of Northumber-
land, argent, crusilly three garbs gules.
In Scotland one garb is the charge on the seal of Sir William Cumin before 1282 his son John used three soon after, as did the Walter added a bend over all Earl of Buchan in 1291 and in Earl of son of the had a label of three points. Buchan, 1306, John, Mr Riddell says, that on the seal of William, Earl of Buchan, attached to a charter to the Church of St Kentigern, Glasgow, in the reign of Alexander II., there is a garb as crest, but the description does not certainly mean this perhaps, rather, one garb on the ;
;
;
;
shield.
Sir James Balfour says, the Earl of Menteith had the and the garbs gules.
field
argent
This great house was ruined by its adherence to the party of the Baliols, and only two branches seem to have survived the downfall. Cuming of Altyre, co. Moray, has been seated there since the middle of the fifteenth century at any rate the seal of Thomas of Altyre, 1476, has two cushions in chief and a garb in base, all within a double tressure crest a talbot's head. This is a curious instance of composed arms, as the coat of his mother Euphemia, daughter of John Dunbar, Earl of Moray, almost extinguishes the paternal garbs. Porteus, and other heralds, say that Altyre bore a fleur-de-lis or in the centre as a difference the arms were not registered till the ;
—
;
;
time of George Gumming of Altyre, c. 1750 azure, three garbs or crest— a lion rampant or holding in his dexter paw a dagger proper " motto " Courage This coat, supporters two horses argent. quartered with Penrose and Gordon, was again recorded, in 1795, by Alexander Penrose Cuming Gordon of Altyre and Gordonston. The second family is Cuming of Inveralochy and Culter the :
;
—
—
;
;
;
latter estate
was erected
into a barony, called Culter-Cuming, 15 13.
Sir William of Inveralochy
was Lyon King of Arms 1512-28, having been Marchmont Herald. previously Inveralochy is said by Porteus, and other heralds, to have borne a bordure engrailed or, and they assign to Culter as his difference a chevron or Sir Alexander of Culter registered arms, c. 1677, azure, three garbs within a bordure or crest a garb proper motto " Pont as a motto used Courage." gives by Cuming early in the seventeenth century, Solatium vitce, and Porteus has a blazon for Sir ;
;
—
;
—
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
31
John, added apparently to the MS., Cuming within a bordure ermine and partd sable. Alexander, younger of Culter, was created a baronet 1695, with remainder to his heirs male the title became dormant 1793, on the death of Sir Alexander, third baronet, and has been assumed lately a whose case has been criticised in an article in the by gentleman ;
"
Genealogist." It is not unlikely that he may be descended from Thomas, uncle of the first baronet, who went abroad in 167 1, and had a certificate of his descent 3 December 1727, being then resident at Cracow.
Le Le
Alexander Earl of Buchan, granted Inveralochy to Jurdan Comyn, pro homagio et seruicio suo, without any statement of relationship, in 1277, or soon after. Two ostriches as supporters were cut on a stone at Culter. Comte de Ross. Comte de Moray, The arms of the Earl of Sutherland are afterwards given azure, three mullets argent, being the usual bearing of
—
his kinsmen, the family, not the Earls, of Moray, so perhaps the names have been transposed. Gules, three mullets or, the recognised
Sutherland coat comes nearer to this assigned to Moray. Mr Riddell, in his " Stewartiana," argues that the Murrays of Touch Adam have the best claim to the male representation of the Lords of Bothwell, and founds partly on armorial evidence. seal of William, in 1463, has three mullets within the double tressure,
A
and two
lions as supporters.
The Murrays
of Tullibardine bore a chevron between three but a seal of Sir William, 1501, has three mullets within mullets; the double tressure, and also lions as supporters. The Murrays of Balvaird, Lords Scone, Lords Balvaird, Viscounts Stormont, and Earls of Mansfield, descended from a younger son of this Sir William,
have always carried the tressure. The Murrays of Abercairney long bore a chevron between three mullets about 1730 William Moray of Abercairny registered arms, three mullets within a double tressure, and two eagles proper as supThe gradual assimilation of the arms of the different porters. families of Murray is one of the most curious examples of changes in coat armour in Scotland. The Earl of Dysart and Murray of Glendoick both were allowed the tressure, although they were cadets of Ochtertyre, who never bore it having branched off from the house of Tullibardine at the time that the chevron was used. In Dumfriesshire the Cockpool Murrays, and also other families in the south, bore a saltire plain or engrailed with three mullets on a chief Sir David Lindsay gives this, but a seal of Cuthbert of Cockpool, in 1477, has the three mullets within a tressure, and this with differences was borne by the Earl of Annandale. The tressure was allowed in 1792 to John Murray of Murraythwaite, descended from an early cadet of Cockpool. Another example, in the south, of change is to be found ;
;
ARMORIAL DE GEL RE.
32
family. Mr Laing gives several seals of the Murrays of Blackbarony, 1501 to 1588, with the saltire the fetterlock makes its first appearance on the seal of John in 1554, who still
in the
arms of the Elibank
;
and placed the added charge in base. The seal of Andrew of Blackbarony, 1565, is a fetterlock and a chief charged with three mullets, which is now the family coat, but cadets still retained the saltire
used the
a later period. Gideon, first of Elibank, in 160 1 seals with the fetterlock and chief charged with three mullets and in honour point a roundle Porteus gives another coat as borne by him, or by his son before he was raised to the peerage azure, on a chevron between three stars Lord Eliargent, a fetterlock between two hunting horns sable. bank had the three mullets within the tressure, with a martlet in saltire at
;
—
the centre for difference.
In the Lyon Register descendants of the first lord are allowed the tressure, but Murrays descended from his younger brothers have the Blackbarony coat with differences. Changes have also been made by branches of the Philiphaugh Murrays, some of whom even dropped the hunting horn, which is the distinctive charge in the coat of that family, and the seventeenth century MSS. give various altered coats assumed and discontinued by cadets, the whole forming a perplexing mass of contradictions. Comte de Carrick.
Le Le Comte d'Athol. Le Comte de Strathern.
Robert IL was Earl of Strathern during the lifetime of David IL, and this is another example of Scotland having been borne by the Stewarts before their accession.
The
son David Earl of Strathern, 1374, has the paternal checquy between two chevronels for Strathern, the whole within the Royal tressure. The father's coat, as here given, is another example of a composed coat, being argent, Scotland, one chevronel for Strathern, but left uncoloured, and over all the Stewart fess a seal of his, in 1369, has the paternal arms only. there should be four roses. (?) Earl of Lennox, incomplete The representation of the great house of Lennox has been contested by Haldane of Gleneagles and Napier of Merchistoun, but Isobel, Duchess of Albany and Countess of Lennox, had a daughter seal of his
fess
;
;
Isobel, wife of Sir Walter
Le
Buchanan of that
and mother of Maurice Buchanan, and her representative, if any exist, must be senior coheir, if there are no legitimate descendants in the male line of the duchess. Comte de Strathern. Two chevronels are on the seal of Malis Ilk,
Earl of Strathern, 1280; that of Earl Gilbert, billets, five, three,
c.
1198, bears nine
and one.
Le Comte de Sutherland,
1357, three mullets on the seal of
William
Earl of Sutherland. Blair. The original coat Sir James Balfour gives for Blair of Balor, a chevron between three torteaux, but adds that it thayock should be sable, a fess (?) argent between three plates.
—
;
ARMORIAL DE GELRE.
33
Le Comte d'Angus.
Seal of Malcolm, Earl of Angus, 1225, a Hon Sir David Lindsay gives gules, a cinquefoil or, as passant gardant. the arms of the ancient earls, which appears to be a mistake. Maud, daughter and heir of Earl Malcolm, married Gilbert de Umfraville who died in 1245, and their son was Gilbert, Earl of his seal, a.d. 1290, is a cinquefoil within an orle of ten cross crosslets. Gilbert de Umfraville, last Earl of Angus of this
Angus;
family, d.s.p. 1381. Probably the arms of Auchinleck
Fouls.
Le
the bearings do not resemble to have been borne for Fowlis or Foulis in Scotland.
any known sire de Ros.
At
;
Thomas de
this time
Ros, Baron of Hamlake, was
the representative of the great house to which belonged William de Ros, a competitor for the crown of Scotland in 1296. Three water
bougets were his arms, and gules, three water bougets argent, is the blazon in the Caerlaverock Roll. It does not, however, seem very likely that in 1370 this family of Ros would be included in a Scotch roll of arms, as their connection with that country had long ceased. Godfrey de Ros of Tarbart may be the person intended I have no evidence for the arms he bore, but his younger brother John had a charter from Robert, Earl of Strathern, afterwards Robert IL, of Halkhead, co. Renfrew. His descendants, as vassals of the Stewarts, added a chevron checquy placed between their three water bougets, but the tincture of the field is or, possibly an alteration to make the coat more resemble that of the overlord. Hugh Ros of Kilravock, co. Nairn, was a cotemporary of Godwater frey, and the bearing of this family also was water bougets. ;
A
bouget with three stars in chief is the seal of Muriel, widow of Sir William de Roys, lord of Kylrauoke, c. 1328. In 1493 the sigillmn Hugonis Rois baronis has a boar's head couped for Chisholm between three water bougets. In 1526 Hugh Rose of Kilravock uses the three water bougets only. Arms registered by Hugh of Kilravock 1672-78— or, a boar's head couped gules between three water bougets motto " Constant and true." To this sable crest a harp azure family belongs Field-Marshal the Lord Strathnairn. Hugh, Baron of Kilravock, sat in Parliament 1481.
—
;
;
—
Hew Rose, genealogy of this family, written 1683-84 by Mr minister of Nairn, was printed, with additions and illustrations by
A
Cosmo ?
Craig.
Innes, Esq., for the Spalding Club, in 1848.
See
W.
II.
ARMORIAL DE GILLES LE BOUVIER BERRY ROI D'ARMES. A.D.
1450-55.
First line
PLATE
—
1
Earl of Buchan. Earl of Crawford. Earl of the Isles.
John, Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles the should be gules, the lions argent, and the tressure probably or. ;
field
—
Second line Earl of Carrick. Earl of Fife. Earl of Strathern.
—
Third line Earl of Lennox. Earl of Sutherland, but probably meant
for Earl of Ross, the bearin g of that family being gules, three lions rampant argent. John, Earl of Sutherland, at this time was husband of Margaret, daughter of Alexander, Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles. Earl of Mar.
—
Fourth line Earl of Douglas. Earl of Angus. The lymphad comes
in place of the heart
;
a mistake
apparently.
Earl of Orkney.
PLATE
2.
—
First line
Earl of March. Earl of Moray, Archibald Douglas.
The
appears to have been added over the unfinished coat of Randolph, Earl of Moray. Can this have anything to do with the saltire quartered by the Crichtons of Frendraught, descended from the marriage of Janet, Countess of Moray (elder sister of Elizabeth Dunbar, Countess of Moray, wife of Archibald Douglas above named?) The seal of her son William, Lord Crichton, 1 471, is a saltire quartering a lion rampant.
Earl of Ormond,
—
Second line The Lord of
Hugh
saltire
Douglas.
David I. granted Swinton, co. G. Berwick, to Ernulf, styled miles meus in the charter he took his surname from his lands, and as Ernulf de Swinton witnessed a
Swinton
:
see
;
charter of Earl Cospatrick to the nuns of Witehoh.
Swinton, which
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
38
as early as the reign of Robert II. is styled a lordship in crown charters, remained in the direct line of this family till sold by the late Robert Hepburne Swinton to a cousin of his own name, whose heirs possess 1
40 1
it.
The barony
of Cranshaws was their property from
was sold in 1695. Sir John Swinton was Earl of Mar till it
in right of his wife
Margaret,
formerly wife of Archibald, Earl of Douglas, and the family became connected by marriage with the Royal House of Stewart. John
In 1389 he, as Sir fell at the battle of Verneuil in 1424. de dominus de with a chevron between seals Mar, John Swyntoun, three boars' heads crest, a boar's head supporters, two lions. Sir Robert John Swinton of Swinton sat in parliament 1560. Sir Alexander, 1644-45, ^"^^ he represented Berwickshire, 1612-21
Swinton
;
;
;
was
also Sheriff of the county. John, of that Ilk, sat in parliament during the Protectorate, was a judge and member of the council in Scotland his son, Sir John, was a member of the last parliament of ;
Scotland and of the first British parliament. John of Swinton was a Senator of the College of Justice, 1782-99, and Alexander of Mersington held the same high office, 1688-1700. Sir John Swinton, a cadet, served abroad with the rank of colonel, and was drowned near Goodwin Sands. Lord Mersington's first wife was a daughter of Home of Huttonhall, by a daughter of the old family of Ker of Mersington, and in consequence of this alliance he bore as a difference on the chevron of his paternal coat the unicorn's head erased of Ker, making its tincture vert. His eldest son, Colonel Charles of Mersington, left a
daughter and heir, Elizabeth, 1732. Catherine Swinton, heiress of Lochtoun, married
Waddel, minister of Whitsome, and died
Mr Adam
in 1748, leaving issue. of the family in his time,
Nisbet says that Sir John, the head of late has added to his arms for supporters two swine as relative to the name," but the arms are not entered in the Lyon Register. The Lord of Lindsay. "
The Lord
of Seton.
—
Third line The Lord of Darnley.
The
first
quarter for the Earl of Lennox, in
L., has the azure field within a bordure gules, charged with eight buckles or. This is perhaps the older and more heraldically correct, as the tressure argent, adorned with buckles or, separates the
gules from the azure. Gilles le Bouvier gives also the
armes of Le
sire
d'Aubigny
in
and
fourth, France within a bordure gules, charged with buckles or second and third, or, a fess checquy azure and eight argent, over all a bendlet gules. The seals of Sir John of Bonkle, 1296, and of Sir John of Darnley, 1426, are a fess checquy surmounted of a bendlet, and the
Berry
;
first
;
same was used by Alexander of Castlemilk, 1512
;
but the seal
ARMORIAL DE BERRY. appended by his mother, Isobel Norvel,
39
same deed, has the arms given on page 4
to the
fess over the bendlet (thus agreeing
with the de Chastelmont, no doubt Castlemilk) as the coat of her husband, William of Castlemilk, who died in 1495 or 1496. The seals of the Darnley Lennox family vary some have the fleurs-delis without any bordure, some have Stewart within a bordure engrailed or a plain bordure charged with eight buckles the Dukes of Lennox bore France within a bordure engrailed. for le Sieur
:
;
The Lord of Montgomery.
Here, in L., and various MSS., the and fourth quarters is gules, but in the entries of the arms of the Earl of Eglinton, and of cadets of his family, it is azure. Sir David Lindsay and some other authorities, make the field of the second and third azure, but in the Lyon Register it is field
of the
first
gules.
In 1630 a curious agreement was made between Alexander, Earl of Eglinton, and Hugh, Viscount Montgomery of Ardes, by which the latter, being most willing that he and his heirs should in all time hereafter acknowledge the respect and duty which they owe to the honourable house of Eglinton, from which they are descended, contracts that they shall deliver to the said Earl and his heirs, being of the surname of Montgomery, " one faire horse of the value of thirty poundes," within the space of a year after the heir and heirs of the said Viscount shall have entered into possession of their manors, &c. The indenture is reproduced in facsimile in Mr Eraser's " Me" morials of the Montgomeries it is ornamented with portraits of the peers, and representations of their arms, crests, and badges, and of a horse. The Eglinton coat is gules in the first and fourth, azure in the second and third, quarters. Viscount Montgomery's arms are parted per pale gules and azure a sword argent, hilted and pommelled or, and a tilting spear of the fourth in saltire between three fleurs-de-lis in chief and flank, and three annulets stoned in base of the last. ;
—
The Lord of
Polloc.
The
dolphin, Scottice pook or pollok, is introduced as a canting charge doubtless, and is not to be met with elsewhere.
The
seal of
was a boar passant, which of the Polloks of Over Pollok, or that
Robert de Polloc,
afterwards became the crest
c.
1200,
Ilk.
A seal
of John Pollok, 1453, is a saltire with a lion dormant in Robert chief, and three hunting horns stringed in flank and base. arms Pollock of Over Pollock, or of that Ilk, registered 1672-78— and base in fess a saltire between or three vert, argent garbugles nished gules crest a boar passant shot through with a dart. proper; motto Audacter et strenue. This coat, quartered with Crawfurd of
—
;
—
Kilbirny, and with the supporters of the Crawfurd family, was again recorded in 1852 by the late Sir Hew Crawfurd-Pollok, Baronet, heir of line
and of
entail of the Pollok family.
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
40
Crawfurd, in his "History of Renfrew," 1710, states that Sir Robert Pollok, Baronet, then bore supporters two ratch hounds in " " Nisbet's Heraldry they are described as hounds proper, but engraved with collars. The engraving of the Pollok arms, in the work last named, represents them as marshalled in a way which has led to a very ludicrous blunder in our own time. First and fourth, Stewart of Darnsecond and third, Mure over all, in an escutcheon of pretence, ley ;
;
;
the paternal coat.
When arms
were granted, in 1847, to Sir Frederick and Sir the three fleurs-de-lis azure, borne by the Darnley George Pollock, Stuarts, were taken as the coat of the family, and allowed with differences to these gentlemen, who thus bear arms which have no connecname, but fortunately have a Pollock crest and motto. Peter, son of Fulbert, had Upper Pollok from the High Steward
tion with their
of Scotland, and took his surname from his lands towards the close of the twelfth century. Pieres de Pollok, of the county of Lanark, and Johan Pollok of Forfarshire, in 1296 swore fealty to Edward I.
Robert Pollok sat in parliament for the burgh of Renfrew, 1669-73, ^nd Sir Robert of that Ilk for the county, 1700 till the He was Union, and afterwards in the first British parliament. created a baronet in 1703, and the patent contains an unusually detailed statement of the antiquity and services of his family the title expired on the death of his grandson in 1783, and the estates eventually passed to the Crawfurds. Peter de Polloc held lands in Morayshire his daughter, Muriel, Lady of Rothes, married before 1226 Walter de Mortach or Murdach, and had a daughter Eva de Mortach, Lady of Rothes all of ;
;
;
these persons appear in the Chartulary of
Church.
Moray
as benefactors to the
—
Fourth line The Lord of Biggar, Fleming. The Lord of Hamilton. The Lord of Kilmaurs, Cunningham.
PLATE First line
3.
—
The Lord of Duchal, Lyle. The Lord of Rowallane, Muer. Gourlay of Kincraig
(?)
Second line Oliphant of Kellie.
L., the
—
bordure engrailed; the seal of Sir William,
in 1449, has a bordure engrailed. There is a notice of this branch of the Lords Oliphant in Wood's " East Neuk of Fife," and there has recently been printed, for private
ARMORIAL DE BERRY. circulation,
"
The Oliphants
in Scotland."
41
The Oliphants
held Kellie
from 1360 till 1613; the younger line being in possession from about till 1380 1563. In 1520 Elizabeth Cunynghame obtained a divorce from John Swintone of that Ilk, because her former husband, Sir John
Oliphant
of Kellie, was alive.
The bordure appears on
Gray.
seals
before
the date
of
this
col-
lection.
Ogilvy of Auchterhouse. Third line RUTHVEN. The Lord of Lewes, Macleod.
—
Other representations of this coat with are given supporters. Torquil Macleod had a charter from David II. of four davochs of the lands of Assynt his descendants, known as the Siol Torquil, held Lewes, first under the Lords of the In 151 1 it was erected into a Isles, and afterwards of the Crown. in charter favour of Malcolm, son and heir of Rory barony by ;
591, on the resignation of Torquil Macleod of Lewes, a Crown charter of the barony of Assynt and others was granted to Colin Mackenzie of Kintail. Margaret, daughter and coheir of Tor-
Macleod
;
in
1
Macleod of Lewes, married Sir Rory Mackenzie of Coigeach, and was ancestress of the Earls of Cromartie, and other families who quil
In 1571 a Crown charter of the quarter the burning mountain. of in favour of Lewes, barony Torquil and the heirs male of his body,
names Gillecallum Garwe Macleod of Raasay
as the next in order
of succession. In 1779 his descendant, John of Rasay, registered arms as heir male of Lewes; the crest and supporters are as in W. motto ''Luceo non uro ;" two crosses patde fitchde gules are added in the dexter and ;
—
sinister chief points.
A previous entry
by the statement of the John Macleod of Colbecks, in the
in 1762 is contradicted
descent of the Rasay family. Island of Jamaica, as representer of John, only brother-german of Roderick, last of Lewes, had been allowed or, on a pedestal a mountain vert inflamed proper, in a dexter canton the arms of the Isle of Man an eagle displayed in the midst of flames of fire crest
—
—
;
— —
"
Luceo non uro;'" below the shield, proper; motto, above the crest I ruke while I see supporters two eagles proper. This is evidently founded on the coat given from the Sunderland Hall MS. ;
of
The Macleods have a pretension to descend from the old Lords the Isle of Man, and began, apparently, early in the eighteenth
century to add the arms of
Man
to their coat.
Sir George Mackenzie of Tarbat registered arms in 1674 he added the burning mountain of the Macleods to his bearings, but not the arms of Man those, however, were borne as a quartering by
When
;
him
as Viscount Tarbat, 1685.
When
Roderick Macleod, second of Cadboll, registered arms, L
ARMORIAL DE BERRY,
42
1725, he was allowed to quarter the arms of the Isle of had also the rare distinction of a compartment, an antique
c.
below the
Man, and crown or
shield.
The
David, Lyon of Braky 1506, has a lion rampant within a double tressure, and this coat, still borne by the Earl of Strathmore, is to be found in various MSS. Sir James Balfour gives a bend sinister engrailed or over all, with the date 1423, and Porteus says a bend engrailed. Etherington Martyn, quoting Rose's MS. as authority, gives for Lyon a bend or charged with three roses gules, surmounting the lion and no tressure. W. has for crest a lady's head within a garland, but in Esplin's collection the present crest appears, within a garland of bay leaves a lady from the waist upwards holding in her hand a One MS. of the latter part of the sixteenth century has a thistle. The supporters, registered 1672-78, are a castle within a garland. unicorn argent armed and unguled or, and a lion parted per fess or and gules. In older MSS. the lion is sometimes azure, sometimes
Lyon Lord Glammis.
seal of
gules.
John Lyon was
and secretary
clerk
to
David
II.,
had a charter
from Robert
II. the second year of his reign of the thanage of he was Great Chamberlain of Scotland a free barony Glammis as 1377-82, and in the ninth year of Robert II. has crown charters, in which he is described as dilectus filius noster and knight. Sir John married a daughter of the King. In the printed pedigrees of this family are omitted the marriages of John, son and heir of Alexander :
second Lord Glammis, to Elizabeth, daughter of Andrew Lord Gray, and of Elizabeth, sister of the first Earl of Kinghorn, in 1586 to William Ker, alias Kirkaldy of Grange.
Fourth
line
—
The Lord of Macneill (?)
There
is
no resemblance between
this
bearing and those recorded. The first entry in the Lyon Register Lachlan of Tearfargus, descended of the Gigha family— quarterly first and fourth, azure, a lion rampant argent second, argent, a sinister hand couped fessways in chief gules, and in the base waved azure a salmon naiant of the first third, or, a galley, her oars in This saltire gules on a chief of the second three mullets of the first. coat was recorded in 1840 by Sir John M'Neill, G.C.B., with a is
;
;
bordure gules and two Persian lions for supporters, and afterwards by his brother Lord Colonsay, with a bordure ermine and two staghounds as supporters. The M'Neills of Colonsay are a younger branch of the M'Neills of Taynish and Gigha, and their pedigree is proved and recorded up to Torquill M'Neill of Taynish, keeper of Castle Swen 1449. In 1806 Roderick M'Niel of Barra, chief of that surname, recorded quarterly, first, vert, a lion rampant or second, argent, a castle proper standing on the sea in base third, or, a lymphad
—
;
;
ARMORIAL DE BERRY. sable sail furled
43
fourth, or, a dexter hand couped erect within an orle of nine fetterlocks gules crest and motto the same as those of the Colonsay family, namely, an arm in armour from the shoulder, ;
;
—
hand grasping a dagger proper; motto Vincere vel mori;" supporters two lions proper. In 1824 Roderick MacNeil of Barra, son of the last named Roderick, matriculated the arms in his own name, when the crest was altered to a rock proper as anciently borne. MACLEOD OF THAT Ilk. See W. The arms were registered about the
—
1730, "
—
when
Murus
''
the supporters are described as regardant gules " aheneus ; device Hold fast.
—
;
motto
David II. granted part of Glenelg to Malcolm, son of Turmode Maclode the family held lands in Skye and Harris of the Lords of the Isles till the forfeiture of that house, when they had crown ;
charters in 1498. The chief has been successively styled, of Glenelg, of Harris, of Dunvegan, laird of Macleod, or of that Ilk.
Glenelg, and afterwards Dunvegan, were held as free baronies. Many cadets of Macleod settled on the continent, and there is
one existing branch
in Holland.
In 1741, Norman, of the Bernera family, lieutenant-colonel in the service of the States General, had a certificate from the Lord Lyon of his descent and To the castle of the paternal coat were added, right to arms. to indicate descent from a daughter of Sir James Macdonald of Sleat, at least
rampant and a hand holding a cross crosslet fitchde, and in base a lymphad. Lord Forbes. The bears' heads are borne couped and muzzled^ Sir David Lindsay, and another MS. of the sixteenth century, give the muzzles sable the latter has a similar bear's head as crest, two bears as supporters, and the motto, " Grace me gyd." Esplin, in 162 1, has the heads muzzled gules a buck's head or supcrest Porteus makes two bloodhounds argent collared gules. porters the bloodhounds proper. Other authorities have a lion and a savage, and a greyhound and a savage two lions as supporters are The blazon in the Lyon Register of the cut in stone at Druminor. arms of William Lord Forbes, 1672-78, is azure, three bears' heads couped argent muzzled gules crest a stag's head attired with ten tynes proper supporters two bloodhounds collared gules motto " Grace me guide." Sir John Skene has left a note of a charter of Alexander III., 1271-72, of the tenementum de Forbeys to Duncan in chief a lion
;
—
—
;
;
;
;
—
;
—
—
;
—
Forbeys. In 1306 Robert Chival and William Comyn claimed the lands of Johan de Forbes from the King of England. John de Forbes was Lord Forbes is Premier Baron of sheriff of Aberdeenshire 1373. Scotland.
ARMORIAL DE BERRY,
44
P LA First line
The Lord
T
E
4.
—
of Graham.
Arms borne by Henry
de Graham at the saltire argent on a chief of the second these bearings were used on his seal by
— siege of Caerlaverock gules, a
three escallops of the field John Graham of Mackesswyn, 1355. One escallop Henry de Graham, c. 1230. That of Sir Nicholas, ;
is
on the
seal of
1250, has the simple bearing, a chief charged with three escallop shells the same is used by Patrick in 1292, and on either side of the shield is a boar's c.
;
head, while on the seal of Sir Nicholas there are several boars' heads. seal of William (date unknown) has a boar's head alone; in 1320 Sir John of Abercorn had a boar's head in the shield, along with
A
the chief
and escallops and three boars' heads, as exterior ornaments
or devices. In 1292 David uses as seal a shield semde of cross crosslets fitchde three escallops. Robert of Kinpont, in 1433, uses as crest a stag's head cabossed, for supporters two lions gardant. head, is on the seal of Walter Graham
An
and
;
early crest, a hound's
and the second Earl of Mon-
Mr Laing so describes it, but trose bore, as crest, a peacock's head. in the later part of the sixteenth century, the supporters are a falcon and a stork, and the crest is a falcon's head. W. has a stork's head. David de Graham had a charter of lands in Forfarshire from William the Lion Henry de Graham was in curia regis at Edin;
burgh 1189-96.
The Lord of
Three buckles on a bend are on the
Leslie.
Norman Leslie, 1292. The Lord of Bouquenel. (?) Buchanan. of that Ilk, 1557,
is
The
three boars' or bears'
seal of Sir
George Buchanan heads erased that of John seal of
;
Buchanan, 1585, has a chevron between three similar heads.
—
Second line Wemyss of Rires. Stuart of Castlemilk.
Arms registered, 1672-78, by Sir Archibald Stuart of Castlemilk, Baronet, with three lines of chequers on the fess. See the Lord of Darnley. The male line of this family, after existing as a separate branch for upwards of four centuries, expired on the death of Andrew Stuart of Castlemilk and Torrance, i8th May 1801.
Murray of Cockpool.
—
(?)
Third line Carlyle of Kinmount.
The
saltire
and chief charged with three
added by the Lords Carlyle, are for Torthorwald, being the bearing on the seal of David de Torthorald, 1 292. Mr Laing describes the charges on the chief as roundles. mullets,
Moffat.
(?)
ARMORIAL DE BERRY, —
Macdowal.
45
Fourth line Crichton of Sanquhar. An interesting example of a composed coat. William de Crichton acquired part of Sanquhar by marriage with Isobel de Ros in the time of Robert I. the water bouget indicates this alliance, and at a later on the seal of Robert Lord Crichperiod, ;
ton, 1509, the lion is quartered with three water bougets for Ros. The coat given in L. for Stewart of Dalswinton.
Stewart. Dunbar.
PLATE First line
5.
—
Ker. (?) Bruce.
Herries of Terregles.
The heads of the families of Herries and Colville married coheiresses named Lindsay, and while the Colvilles have ever since quartered that coat, this is the only known example
being borne by Herries. King David IL, in the twenty-ninth year of his reign, granted the barony of Terregles to Sir John Heryz, and it remains in the possession of a descendant. The name appears in charters about the middle of the twelfth century, and in 1296 William de Heriz, of the county of Dumfries, swore fealty to Edward L The seal of Archibald Herries of Maidenpaup, 1561, brother and heir male of William Lord Herries, is a mullet between three hedgehogs his great-grandson sold that estate in 1629. Herries of Terraughty ended in an heiress, who married Sir John Maxwell of Cowhill. branch which held Barnbarroch, in the parish of Colvend, for of
its
;
A
several generations, ended in an heiress in the end of the seventeenth
century.
Of
the
Mabie family were John, 1520; Robert, 1531; Sir Robert,
John, 1622, son of Richard John, 1632-47, son of John Richard, 1652 William, 1704 John, 1661 John, mentioned by Nisbet as bearing the chief coat of the family, but Porteus gives a crescent azure as a difference; 1717, John of Auchenfranko was served heir male of his cousin, John of Mabie. About the end of the sixteenth century several cadets were settled in Edinburgh as merchant burgesses of these, William was founder of the families of Harthwaite and Halldykes, to which belonged Robert, merchant in Rotterdam, who registered arms in 1747 with a crescent in the centre for difference he purchased Halldykes from his father of Richard, 1604 ;
''
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
elder brother, and died
in 1791, leaving issue. Sir Robert, knighted in 1774, a partner of the firm of Coutts, of the seller of Halldykes, was father of the Right Hon. John
son Charles Herries, Chancellor of the Exchequer, whose son John Herries of St Julians, co. Kent.
M
is
Charles
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
46
William, younger brother of Sir Robert, recorded arms in 1789, with a bordure wavy gules as his difference he was a merchant and banker at Ostend. ;
—
Second line Jardine of Applegarth. The field or instead of argent. KiRKPATRiCK OF Closeburn. The colours reversed.
Kennedy. Third line
—
a seal
of Alan de Cathcart of the thirteenth century bears the virgin and child. and oval shape,
Cathcart.
is
of an
The
present arms, three cross crosslets fitch^e, each issuing from a crescent, are cut on a stone in Paisley Abbey, c. 1350 supporters
—two of Alan Lord Cathcart, 1450, has the same bearings. The — — Crest the bust of a female supporters two women. ;
lions.
seal
affrontde
;
John of Glendowys uses a fess between three cross his wife, Sybilla, crosslets fitchde, in the honour point a man's heart daughter of Sir Alan Cathcart of Carleton, at the same time bore a In
151
1
;
head contournde between three similar crosses. The heart in the centre of the shield, between three crosses as in 1350, is still borne by the Carleton family, but the difference assigned to them in various Funeral Escutcheons is a bordure nebuly. The bearings of the Lords Cathcart have been varied about 1580 two pelicans valuing themselves are the supporters. Crest a Motto " I hope to speid." See W. pelican in her piety. stag's
;
—
Maclellan of Bomby. Maghie.
—
—
Porteus has for Maghie of Balmaghie sable, three leopards heads argent or or. Stacie gives Maghie of surgeon vert, a lance argent between three leopards' heads or. The name of Gilmychel MacEth, of the county of Dumfries, appears on the Ragman Roll 1296, and the following year King Edward thanks Gille Michel MacGethe, and others, for services rendered in Scotland 1339, Michael Mageth was admitted to the King's (?)
,
—
;
peace by Edward IIL 1424-5 John Maggy had an English safe-conduct as a retainer of David Menzies. Balmaghie, for many generations the seat of the family, was erected into a barony, and Sir John, who died in 1658, was knighted his son, Alexander of
Balmaghie, married Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Colonel William Stewart of ;
Castle Stewart.
—
Fourth line Campbell of Loudoun. Campbell. (?) Flokart.
ARMORIAL DE BERRY. PLATE First line
47
6.
—
Blackwood.
Maxwell of Calderwood. About
this time a saltire within a plain a seal of bordure appears on John Maxwell of Calderwood. Sempill of Eliotstoun. In 1535 these bearings are found on the seal of William Lord Sempill, with a stag's head as crest, and two hounds as supporters afterwards the chevron was borne checquy.
—
;
Second line Home of Dunglas. The tinctures differ from those of the recognised bearings, and it would be interesting, if this is to be relied on, to know that the Homes claiming descent from the great house of Dunbar, Earl of March, originally bore gules, a lion rampant argent, being the Dunbar tinctures, although all the Homes have long had the field vert. The seals of Alexander Home 1437, Sir Alexander 1450, and Alexander Lord Home i486, all have the lion of Home in the first and fourth quarters, and the papingoes of Pepdie in the second and The seal of Alexander, afterwards second lord, is the earliest 'third. example of the inescutcheon of Landell, an orle, which is the bearing of John de Laundel on his seal, c. a.d. 1224. The crest of a deer's or fawn's head is on seals 1430 to i486 in 1542, George Lord Home uses a deer couchant and c. 1565, the pre;
sent crest, a lion's head,
is
given in
W
;
;
issues from the wreath, is "Avise la Jin." later MS. it
A
surrounded by flames, and the motto is has the lion's head surrounded by branches, and the motto ''Ala fin attendesT The seal of Alexander, first earl, has the present motto, "True Two parrots, or falcons, were borne as supporters to the end," 1605.
by Sir David, first of Wedderburn, and others of the family and in 1450 two lions, the supporters of the Earls of Home, are on the seal of Sir Alexander in the sixteenth century they were sometimes gules, sometimes argent. Sir Patrick Home of Polwarth, baronet, regishe had very singular supporters two battering tered arms 1672-78 when the Barony of Polwarth was conferred, these rams gules, but were altered to two lions regardant argent. ;
;
—
;
The
printed pedigrees omit to notice the dispute as to the succession to the Earldom of Home, which occurred after the death of
James, second Earl in 1633. His father, Alexander, first Earl, had entered into a contract with his kinsman, John Home of Coldingknows, whereby they mutually entailed their estates, including the Earldom of Home, on one another failing heirs male of their respective bodies. This contract was reduced at the instance of the second Earl,
who was
childless
and had two
sisters,
on the ground that
Coldingknows had sold part of his estate, and incurred debts as a burden on the remainder. On the Earl's death, James of Colding-
ARMORIAL BE BERRY,
48
knows, the heir male, grandson of John above named, took proceed-
Doune and Lady Maitland, and ings against the coheiresses, Lady in March 1634, on the ground got the decree of reduction reversed " for that the object of the tailzie was preservation of the honour of the house of Hume, and the antient dignity and estate thereof, and that it might remain with the name of Hume," In various services in 1633 and 1635, he is designed James Home of Coldingknows only, and it was not till May 1636 that he obtained recognition as Earl of Home. John Home, first of the Coldingknows line, married Margaret, The Homes of only child of Andrew Ker, younger of Cessford.
Bassendean are the nearest cadets. Melville (?) L gives argent, a fess gules. Livingston.
—
Third line Livingston of Callendar, The tressure is usually vert. Menzies of Enoch (?) Murray of Gask. Fourth line Wardlaw of Torry. Livingston of Drumry. Sir Robert figured about this time,
—
General Council 1440, and in Parliament 1457.
made
The
sat in the
tressure
is
again
azure.
->.
PLATE First line
7.
—
SiBBALD OF BaLGONY. Colville.
Rutherford. Second
—
line
Turnbull. The legend as
to the origin of this surname and the arms that the founder saved Robert L when attacked by
belonging to it is, a wild bull in Stirling Park.
Mr
"
Memorials of Angus and Mearns," cites Walter de Trembley, who held the lands of Delany in the Mearns in 1263, Robert de Trembleye of the same district, who signed the Ragman Roll, Robert de Tremblay in Fife, c. 1280, and Robert and John of Tremblay, who were on an inquest 1342, as probable ancestors of the Turnbulls. It is not unlikely that from them may have descended Jervise, in his
some
of the Trimbills, Trombills, Trumbills, or Turnbulls in Fife but it is certain that the Angusshire family of Turnbull of Strickathrow was founded by a cadet of the Turnbulls of Bedrule, co. Roxburgh. In 1315 Robert I. granted part of Philiphaugh, co. Selkirk,
Willelmo dicto Turnebull
;
;
in
the thirty-fourth year of his reign
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
49
David II. confirms a charter of lands in Innerdovat, co. Fife, held by the deceased Robert Trymblay, and resigned by his daughter and It seems clear, then, that in the south Turnbull was heir, Cecilia. originally a sobriquet, while north of the Forth
Tremblay was pro-
bably a name of locality. Robert III. confirmed a charter by Robert Turnbull to Gregory Kingissone of part of Innerdovat. Grange or East Barnes, and Turnbull's Beath in Fife, were old possessions of the family, the former line ending in coheiresses about 1772; Mr John Trimbill was vicar of Cleish 1507; to the same family probably belonged William of Pittencriefif, near Dunfermline, whose son, William of Airdrie, in the east of Fife, left a daughter and heir, Elizabeth, wife of Sir John Preston of Penicuik. George, bailie of Cupar, sat in Parliament for the burgh 1661, and died the next year, leaving issue. Philiphaugh was in possession of a Turnbull three hundred years after the original grant John was Sheriff of Selkirkshire in 1360; William of Philiphaugh, 1426. In 1467 John Turnbull was directed to retour the rents of barons in that county Adam of ;
;
Ralph, father of John,
who had
sasine, Philiphaugh, 1483-1509; Before William of of this, 1624. 1524; Philiphaugh, part Philiphaugh had been carried, by the marriage of Elizabeth Turnbull, a Porteus gives for Turnbull of coheiress, to the family of Murray. Philiphaugh vert, a bull's head erased argent. Bedrule was possessed by George Turnbull before the middle of the fifteenth century; George of Bedrule married Janet, daughter of Sir Andrew Kerr of
—
Fernihirst,
and died "
in 1528, leaving
a son. Sir Thomas.
Sir David
"
Lindsay mentions auld Badreule as at the Raid of the Reidswire, "with all his Trumbills at his back." In 1668 Thomas was served heir to his father in the barony of Bedrule, which soon afterwards passed into other hands. To this family belonged William, Bishop of Glasgow, founder of the University there, who died in 1454. Peter Turnbull of Strickco. from descended athrow, Forfar, Bedrule, died soon after the Restoration, leaving three sons
—
—
John, his successor, who registered arms, 1672-78 argent, three bulls' heads erased sable armed vert, being the Bedrule arms, within a bordure indented of the second for difference, and died in 1693 his descendants were seated at Strickathrow, and afterwards at Dalladies and Muirton, nearly to the middle of the nineteenth I.
;
century.
James of Smiddyhill, who also registered arms; four of his descendants succeeded him in that estate. III. Mr Peter, minister at Laurencekirk, whose only. son James, II.
in 1696, also recorded arms.
bull
;
.
Minto was confirmed by charter of David II. to Walter TurnJohn of Minto granted a charter in favour of his nepos Sir N
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
so
William Stewart of Jedworth, which was confirmed in 1390; after his death in 1423, his son, Walter Turnbull, objected to this disinheritance on the ground that his father suffered from leprosy, and the result of the dispute was a division of the lands between the claimants. John Turnbull sold the barony of Minto after 1655. failure of the Bedrule and Minto families in the direct the After the Turnbulls of Know, 1652; John of
line,
Know Know
—
claimed the chiefship John was of descended from Turnbull of Minto, ;
argent, an ear of rye vert (probably to registered arms, 1672-78 indicate a maternal descent from Riddell) between three bulls' heads erased sable armed of the second. The crest is a bull's head cabossed.
Nisbet mentions a seal of Turnbull of Minto, 1455, as one bull's head cabossed another seal, 1439, however, has a head erased as Besides the branches mentioned there were many afterwards borne. On the roll of others, forming at one time a powerful border clan. middle laird of Bedroule and on the are the landlords march, 1587, George Turnbull of Halroule. There had been a "great break" between the Rutherfords and Turnbulls in Teviotdale, for which, in 1478, Parliament are to provide a remedy. In October 1565 the Earl of Bedford, in a letter to Sir William Cecil, mentions Trumbull the prophecier, and that Captain Cockburn " can tell what the Queen of Scots saith of his prophecies." Persons of the name settled in France bore argent, three bulls' heads couped sable armed and langued gules, but the Tournebu or Turnebu in Normandy, who have been claimed as of Scottish origin, had for arms argent, a bend azure. In Berry, a family of Tourneboeuf bore, azure, three bulls' heads or. Sir William Trumbull of Easthampstead, co. Berks, Secretary of State and Ambassador, who died in 17 16, bore argent, three bulls' heads erased sable breathing fire proper his grandfather, a native of Craven, co. York, acquired property in Berkshire about 1630. Sir William's marriage to Lady Judith Alexander, daughter of Henry, Earl of Stirling, connected him with a Scotch family their granddaughter and heir married Hon. Colonel Martin Sandys, and is represented by Arthur W. J. W. Blundell Trumbull Sandys Roden William Turnbull was Abbot of MelHill, Marquess of Downshire. rose 1504, and of Cupar 1510-26. ;
;
;
Sandilands of Calder. Lauder of Bass. Third line DuNDAS OF DuNDAS. Towards the close of the twelfth century Dundas, in West Lothian, was granted by Waldev son of Cospatric, to Helias
—
son of Huctred, to be held for half a knight's service. The descendants of Helias took their surname from their lands, which were inherited by the present James Dundas, Esquire, by whom they have recently been sold. The wording of the charter gives no countenance to the theory.
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
51
which, however, is not in itself improbable, that the Dundases descend from a younger son of the house of Dunbar. In 1467 Duncan of Dundas was appointed to make retour of the lairds sat in Parliament 1469-87, and in rents in Haddington In 1669 George of that Ilk had a Crown charter, erecting all 1560. his lands into a free barony, to be called the barony of Echlin. In the middle of the fifteenth century the family of Fingask in Perthshire branched off, which at one time set up a claim to be chief of the name, and although this altogether broke down, its representative, Thomas of Fingask, co. Stirlingshire, in 1769 obtained a Royal 'Warrant for supporters a lion and an eagle both proper, and was allowed to add a double tressure flowered counterflowered gules to his coat. The difference originally borne by Fingask was a crescent ;
—
;
Sir John of Fingask was knighted in 1633, when the Earldom of Ancrum was conferred on his cousin-german he sold the Perthshire estate, which had been erected into a barony. ;
co. Forfar, his son and successor, registered lion rampant within a bordure indented the arms, 1672-78, being In the next generation Thomas, a merchant in Edinburgh, gules. acquired lands in Stirlingshire, which were, by Crown charter, erected, in 1730, into the barony of Fingask, and in 1758 he was served heir
John of Baldovie,
general of his grandfather Sir John his eldest son, Thomas, was Lyon Depute 1744-54, and obtained for his father a concession of arms, as head of the family, with two lions as supporters, which, in ;
was reduced by decree of the Court of Session at the instance of Dundas of that Ilk, who was recognised as head of the family, with 1762,
the sole right to the chief coat.
They have long borne two compartment below
Dundas Zetland
is
lions gules as supporters, the shield a salamander in flames.
and as a
of Carronhall represents Fingask, of which the Earl of
a cadet.
was Lyon King of Arms in the To Robert Dundas, third of latter half of the fifteenth century. Arniston, were granted, about 1680, as supporters, a lion gules and
Duncan Dundas
of Newliston
an elephant proper the latter to indicate that his grandfather Sir James, first of Arniston, was eldest son of the second marriage of George of that Ilk with Katherine, daughter of Lawrence Lord this branch, which has produced so many judged and Oliphant lawyers, and of which the Viscounts Melville are cadets, bears as difference a bordure ermine. Mowbray of Barnbougle. Crichton. ;
;
—
Fourth line Ramsay of Dalhousie. Crichton of Cairnes. bickerton of luffness
.
(?)
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
52
PLATE
8.
—
First line
These, with marks of cadency for the younger The seal branches, have always been the bearing of all of the name. of William Lord Borthwick, 1522, has a horse's head for crest and two lions as supporters but in the reign of Mary, and ever since, the crest has been a moor's head, with the motto, ''Qui conduit" or ''Qui conducit," and two angels as supporters. From John Borthwick of Crookston, who sat in Parliament
Lord Borthwick.
;
1457, descended William of Crookston, who registered arms 1673, with a crescent as a difference crest an eagle volant with a St " Fide et spe." Andrew's cross on his breast motto ;
;
—
—
Notable persons of the name were Mr George, archdeacon of Glasgow, one of the envoys to England to treat for the liberation of James L Robert, gunner and founder of artillery, who, for his services, had a charter of Ballencrieff in East Lothian from James IV. in 1 5 10, which was held by his descendants for several generations Mr David of Lochhill, king's advocate, who sat in Parliament ;
;
1574-79; William, depute marischal 1538; and Mr Mark, justice depute 1595. Hepburn of Hailes. The Bannatyne " Miscellany," Vol. IIL, and " Adversaria," contain some interesting charters and documents which correct errors in the published pedigrees of the Earls of Bothwell.
The
seal of
William Hepburn, son of Sir Patrick of Waughton,
1558, has the chevron between three mullets. Mr Laing's collection contains seals of several of the chief line, and of cadets, the oldest being that of Patrick de Hepborne,
37 1, the chevron charged with a rose and two lions within a bordure engrailed. Funeral Escutcheon gives the name of the first wife of the last Earl of Bothwell, Anna Rustig, of the house of Seminarva van Adresall, adding that she was here in Scotland at 1
A
Court.
The Hepburns
are said to be from
England
;
in
Northumber-
land Hebborne of Hebborne bore argent, three cups sable, in each a flame of fire proper. Several members of the Hepburn family figure in France, and there the arms were altered both as to arrangement and tincture azure, on a chevron between two lions rampant confronts in chief, ;
and three spur rowels one and two in base or, three roses gules. Ker of Samuelston. The arms of this family, given by Lindsay and other authorities, are a unicorn salient and not gorged Porteus says a unicorn's head. David H. confirmed a charter of Samuelston, by William Earl of Douglas, to Richard Ker. In 145 1 William Earl of Douglas gives a charter of Hutton;
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
53
George of Samuelston and the heirs male of his body, his three natural sons and the heirs male of their bodies, whom failing to Andrew Ker of Auldtounburn, his two brothers and the heirs male of their bodies this would seem to point at a relationship between the Samuelston and Auldtounburn families. The latter bore unicorns' heads in their shield, and it is to be observed that the Hamiltons of Samuelston took a mascle or, one of the bearings of Ker of Cessford, as crest. George Ker of Samuelston had a daughter who married, first, Alexander Lord Home, Great ChamberNicholas, lain of Scotland secondly. Sir Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie. From certain contracts and charters, &c., 1497- 1 555, it would seem that George Ker married a second wife, Marion Sinclair, formerly wife of George Home of Wedderburn, and had a son, James Ker, hall
to
;
;
although Lady Home is genehis last appearance is in 1554, when he rally designed heiress ratifies his resignation of his rights in Samuelston to Janet Home, Lady Samuelston, wife of Sir John Hamilton, the grand-daughter and heiress of Nicholas Lady Home,
who
held Samuelston, or part of
it,
;
—
Second line Towers of Dalry. (?) Lauder of Bass or Biel. COCKBURN OF LaNGTON. Third line Forrester of Corstorphine. Logan OF Restalrig. DiSHINGTON OF ArDROSS. Fourth line Hop Pringle. (?)
—
—
Harcarse
—a name of
Sir David Lindsay gives this coat with the field sable and the charges argent. The seal of Robert Harechas, sheriff of Perth 1305, is three fleurs-de-lis surlocality in Berwickshire.
mounted of a bend.
Adam
de Harcarres was abbot of Newbottle
and died 1245. In 1296, Roger, and Thomas, Marjory de Harkars of Berwickshire, and Alisandre de Harcars of the county of Fife, did homage to Edward L, and the lands of the last named were restored to him. Alan de Harecarres occurs as a witness in the reign of Alexander H., and Robert de Harcarse 1 29 1. Robert Harkers had a charter of the barony of ,Keillar from Robert L, and John de Harkers, in 1329, has a gift from the 1216,
afterwards of Melrose,
king.
David n. grants the barony of Preston, in Dumfriesshire, to Thomas Harkars, and in the same reign Alan de Harkers witnessed a charter of Patrick, Earl of Dunbar, at Dunse. The surname seems to have at an early period become rare in 1448, David Harcase Armiger is a witness in Fife I45"9, safe-conduct to James Harkes, merchant in 1605, James Harcas sat in par;
;
;
liament
;
a
little later
persons of the o
name
held property at Aberlady.
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
54 Dalzell.
the only instance in which the club, which is of curious The seals of Sir William and Marion Dalzyell, design, appears. man with arms extended. The coat is elsewhere a naked have 1392,
This
is
F
with the man hanging on a gibbet, an allusion no doubt to an absurd legend that the founder of the family rescued the body of a kinsman of Kenneth II. who had been hanged by the Picts. Another allusion to this story is the supporters, if they can be so called, granted 1685 to General Thomas Dalzell of Binns two These were dropped in 1772, when Sir Robert pavilion poles. Dalzell of Binns was recognised as heir male of the family of Menteith, and allowed their supporters. The seal of Isabella Dalzell, 1529, has a naked man with arms extended, and the Lyon Register has never admitted the gibbet as a given from
—
bearing of any of the name.
The surname
is
undoubtedly taken from Dalzell
in Lanarkshire,
the original seat of the family. Sir Robert of Glenae, who was created a baronet in 1666, was son of Sir John of Newton and Glenae, younger son of the first Earl of Carnwath, and Agnes Nisbet his wife.
de Dalzell was sheriff of Lanark in 1288. In 1296 Thomas de Dalielle of that county did homage to Edward I., and Robert sat in Parliament 1368. The usual pronunciation of the name is shown in an Act of Parliament, 1627, to " naturalise Sir Robert Dyell, gentleman of His Majesty's Privy Chamber," afterwards Earl of Carnwath. According to a funeral entry, the paternal grandmother of General
Hugh
Thomas
Dalzell
was a Law of the same
family, as the
Archbishop of
Glasgow.
PLATE
9.
—
First line
Baillie of Lamington. Scott of Balwearie.
(?)
normanville.
—
Second line Maxwell of Pollok. The Maxwells of Pollok bore an annulet stoned on the saltire, as on the seal, about 1400, of Sir John, where there are supporters two lions (?) two apes were afterwards borne. The arms of John Maxwell of Pollok, on his seal, in 1503, are a saltire charged with an annulet. The seal of Patrick Maxwell of Newark, 1532, has the saltire with an annulet in chief and a bird in base. Nether Pollok was given, about the year 1270, by Sir Aymer de Maxwell to his younger son John the lands were erected into a barony 2nd February 1672. Sir John Maxwell represented Renfrewshire in Parliament 1593161 7, and Sir George, 1649-50.
—
;
.
;
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
55
Sir John, Lord Justice-Clerk 1699-1702, was created a baronet with remainder to the heirs male of his body but being
in 1682,
;
childless,
and having no brother, obtained a second patent on
his
own
resignation in 1707, extending the limitation to his other heirs On the death of Sir John Maxwell, the last of tailzie whomsoever.
heir male of the family, in 1865, the estates and representation passed to his nephew, William Stirling of Keir, who assumed the surname of Maxwell and the baronetcy. As he did not take the
under the old
be a question whether he had a valid right to the title. Sir William had the distinction of being the only commoner who ever was a Knight of the Thistle. estate
"
entail,
it
may
Memoirs of the Maxwells of
Pollok," by
W.
Fraser, were
printed for private circulation 1863.
Abercrombie. This coat and the heads sable.
again represented with the chevron gules Sir David Lindsay makes all the charges
is
azure.
The
seal of
George of Pitmedden, 1537, has a chevron between
three boars' heads erased.
Sir J. Balfour gives for Abercrombie of Pitelpie between three boars' heads couped azure.
—
or,
a chevron
—
Pont has two blazons for Abercrombie of that Ilk argent, a chevron gules between three boars' heads erased azure or sable. Crest an oak tree fructed proper, sometimes placed on a burning " Tace." mount. Motto The seal of Sir Robert of that Ilk, 1493, has two lions gardant
—
—
as supporters.
—
1674 Sir Alexander of Birkenbog, baronet, registered argent, a chevron gules between three boars' heads erased azure; motto " Mercie is my desire." In 1792 his descendant, Sir George, registered the same, with a falcon proper as crest, and over it the motto, "Petit alta ;" supporters two greyhounds argent collared His pedigree is given back to Alexander of Birkenbog, gules. falconer to Charles I. Richard Abercrombie of Abercrombie and Balcormo, co. Fife, was dead in 1270, leaving a son and heir, William. In 1296 William and John, both of that shire, did homage to In
—
—
Edward
I.
Sir R. occurs before
1
300.
Alexander was Sheriff of Perth in 1370
the barony of Murthly, in that county, was long in the possession of the family, and was sold, in 161 5, by Thomas of that Ilk, and his son Alexander.
Thomas
;
of Abercrombie sat in the General Council, on a commission on the Laws 1449, and a Lord Auditor 1450.
In 1441
was In
1470 the Lord of Abercromby sat in Parliament, and in 1^78 Alexander of that Ilk was a member of the Commission on the Laws. In the reign of James IV. Mr David was clerk to the King, dean of Aberdeen, and sub-dean of the Royal Chapel.
.K
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
56
In 1493 Sir Robert of that Ilk granted Balcormo, by charter, to his younger son William, whose daughter and heir, Helen, married and their descendant, Hugo Arnot, still holds the Peter Arnot which estate, belonged to his ancestor before 1270. ;
Thomas Abercrombie
sold Abercrombie in 1627. At a very early period the name is met with in the north John in 1330 acts for the burgh of Cullen Alexander, before 1350, pur;
;
chased half of the lands of Ardhunyner in the Garioch in 1362 he possessed Pethmalchy and Harthill. In 1512 these and other lands, including Pitmedden, were united and erected into the free barony of Pitmedden for George Abercrombie. Various misfortunes overtook the family in the sixteenth ;
century Alexander of Ley was killed, it was believed, by witchcraft in 1509; Alexander of Pitmedden was shot dead by the Gordons in 1583; Alexander of Pitmedden was accused of bigamy in 1587, and his place of Pitmedden burnt the following year. The published pedigrees are not quite satisfactory, but it is probable that Birkenbog is the head of the Abercrombies in the north. Skeith, in Banffshire, was for several generations the property of a separate branch. Mr Jervise says it was sold in 1720 by Alexander, who left a son, James, merchant in Cullen. :
The
funeral escutcheon of George, who purchased Tullibody, and died in 1699, leaving that property to a younger son of Birkenbog, who was ancestor of the Lords Abercromby and Dunfermline,
makes him descended from Skeith. There is, however, a curious " note appended Done conforme the persons concernedes direction :
—
not being of a sure information on the father's side."
Maculloch. Third line Meldrum. See
—
W
for
arms and supporters of Meldrum of that
Ilk, co.
Aberdeen.
The .
this
1468
William de Melledrum, 1292, has three pallets, and' bearing again appears in that of William Meldrum of Fyvie, seal of
—parted per
pallets
and
-sinister side
pale, the dexter side parted per fess, in chief three in base three unicorns' heads couped for Preston ; the
has an otter
salient.
—
Sir George of Fyvie, in 1547, uses first and fourth, a demiotter issuant from water in base; second and third, Preston. The seals of Alexander of Seggie, 1449; David, canon of Dunkeld and official of St Andrews, 1495; William, 1532; and Thomas, official
of Brechin, 15 14,
charges and
all
have the otter
salient,
with additional
slight variations.
William, Bishop of Brechin, in 1500 used an otter salient, with a mullet in sinister chief point quartering a chevron charged. entry in the Lyon Register is for Mr George of Crombie, 1672-78 first and fourth, argent, a demi-otter issuing from
The only
—
ARMORIAL DE BERRY. a bar wavy sable
;
second and third, Preston
;
all
57 within a bordure
engrailed sable.
The
coat,
however,
registered several times as a quartering by and Seton, and the otter is crowned or the
is
the families of Urquhart
;
crown appears in 1495 on the seal of the Canon of Dunkeld. The Urquharts of Meldrum at first placed Meldrum in the first and fourth quarters, Seton in the second and third but in 1741 resumed their paternal coat, and took as crest a demi-otter sable crowned with an antique crown or, holding betwixt his paws a crescent gules, to indicate representation of the Meldrums of that Ilk and Setons of Meldrum. Sir Philip de Meldrum, c. 1220, witnessed a charter of William, Earl of Buchan, to the Priory of St Andrews 1262, Sir Philip and In his and Sir Sir William wit1278, Agnes Cumyn, spouse. Philip ness the foundation charter of the Church of Turriff William was sheriff of Aberdeenshire 1290, and afterwards, in 1296, he swore The same year fealty to Edward I., and his lands were restored. ;
'
;
;
David, of the county of Fife, also submitted to the English king in 1278, Alexander de Meldrum is named in the chartulary of Dun;
fermline.
Sir Philip was sheriff of Banff 1337 William sat in a general council 1364 William was sheriff of Aberdeen 1348. ;
;
Meldrum of Seggy, in Fife, bore three otters passant according to some authorities James of Seggy was a senator College of Justice 1575-88; Sir David of Seggy was father ;
sable,
of the of
Mr
William 1622. George Meldrum of Crombie
three coheiresses in 1705 Jean James Duff; Helen, wife of Abercromby of GlassIsabella, wife of Alexander Ogilvie, advocate. left
:
of Crombie, wife of
augh
;
and
Crawford. Dalrymple.
Nisbet describes a seal of James de Dalrymple of Inglistoun and Annetistoun 1402, appended to an obligation to his superior. Sir Robert Stewart of Durrisdeer eight lozenges in saltire with a buckle in chief, which he considers to be taken as a mark of vassalage crest a hart's head; supporters two lions gardant. Porteus gives the arms of Dalrymple of Lacht as or, a saltire engrailed sable, perhaps a mistake for lozengy he also gives Dalrymple of Stair or, on a saltire azure nine lozenges of the field. The arms of Sir James of as are his crest was a rock proper, Stair, baronet, registered given " with the motto, Quiescam." The supporters of the first viscount and first earl were two storks each with a serpent in its beak, but afterwards two lions have been borne, and the motto altered to " Firm." The surname is taken from the barony of Dalrymple, co. Ayr,
—
—
—
;
—
—
;
;
which, after being held for at least three generations, was. alienated about 137 1 by Malcolm and Hugh de Dalrymple to John Kennedy of Dunure, who in 1375 had a gift of the relief payable from the lands of the late Arthur de Dalrymple.
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
58
was acquired in 1450 by William Dalrymple, by marriage with Agnes Kennedy it was erected into a barony for Sir James in He was son of James Dalrymple of Stair, by Janet, daughter 1669. of Fergus Kennedy of Knockdow James was younger son of James of Stair, by Isabel Kennedy of the Bargeny family. His elder brother, John of Stair, was father of James of Stair, who d.s.p. There is a missing charter of Robert HI., confirming to Duncan Dalrumpill the He was probably ancestor of office of Toshia Daroche in Nithsdale. Stair
;
;
the families of Lacht, Inglistoun, Waterside, &c. James of Lacht 1398; in an action, 1478-83, between Christian Grierson, Lady Lacht,
andjohn Dalrymple, mention ismadeof landsheldof Stewartof Rossyth; 1492, Robert, Prior of the Carmelites at Queensferry; Morris in Waterside, 1558; Malcolm in Waterside, 1585; Malcolm of Waterside, 1616; Malcolm of Enoch and John of Schalloch, 162 1 John of W^aterside, 1630, and his brother Malcolm. William, last of Waterside, died unm. in March 1760; his sisters and coheirs were Agnes, wife of Mr Alexander Orr, minister of Hoddam, and mother of Alexander Orr, who sold the estate in 1782 Elizabeth, wife of William Murray of Murraythwaite Susan, wife of Dugald Maxwell of Cowhill. This ;
;
;
In family bore Dalrymple as Stair within a bordure engrailed gules. 1369 John Dalrymple held land in Edinburgh John was provost of the burgh 1392 John sat in parliament as its commissioner 1445 he is designed " the king's merchant," and was an official of the mint for several generations this was one of the leading burgess
—
;
;
;
families of Edinburgh.
In 1602 William, then a boy at Ayr School, was kidnapped by the Mures, kept away from home for several years, and made to change his name. This was to prevent him giving evidence as to the slaughter of Sir Thomas Kennedy having returned, he was murdered on Girvan sands and his body thrown into the sea. ;
It
would seem
that
William Dalrymple belonged
family, as an attempt was made to get John, from prosecuting the guilty parties. Fourth line
to the Stair
laird of Stair, to abstain
—
Cochrane.
Crawfurd gives the arms of John de Cochran of that Ilk and three boars' heads erased. A later Pitfour, 1519, from his seal modification of the coat is given from W. A third bearing, given in several MSS., is ermine, on a chief gules a boar's or stag's head between two mullets argent. When Sir William was created Lord Cochrane, the arms confirmed to him by Sir James Balfour, Lyon, in 1648, were ermine, on a chief gules a stag's head between two mullets or crest a demilion crowned; supporters two leopards or. This was altered in
—
—
—
—
;
—
—
1668 by Sir Charles Erskine, Lyon, to argent, a chevron gules between three boars' heads erased azure armed of the second crest a horse passant argent motto " Virhite et labore;" supporters two ;
—
;
—
—
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
59
greyhounds argent collared azure. In the registration for William, Earl of Dundonald, 1672-78, the same person, the boars' heads are armed and langued of the field, and the supporters are collared or and leashed gules. Thomas, Earl of Dundonald, registered arms 1774, quartering Blair of that Ilk as heir male of that family, and the boars' heads of Cochrane are, on this occasion, azure langued gules. The Cochranes of Barbachlaw in West Lothian, of whom Nisbet gives a short notice, bore, in 1614, a boar's head erased and in chief three mullets; but as registered, 1672-78, by Alexander of Barbachlaw, the mullets are disposed chevron ways, the field argent, charges azure. It is from this family that the Cochrans of Ashkirk claim descent, and they called their property near Musselburgh, and afterwards a farm on their Roxburghshire estate, Barbachlaw. In 1795 arms were registered by Archibald of Ashkirk in Musselburgh, and in 18 1 3 by his son, Archibald of Ashkirk in Roxburghshire, and of Bar-
bachlaw in Mid-Lothian; the coat and crest, however, rather resemble those of the Earl of Dundonald. Cochrane of Dumbreck, co. Aberdeen, bore ermine, on a chief gules a stag's head erased or between two mullets argent. Of this family Mr Walter was provost of Aberdeen, and his son Walter sat
—
in parliament for the city 1693.
From
a second son of Barbachlaw descended the family, founded by a merchant burgess of Edinburgh, which possessed Rochsoles, co. Lanark, for five generations, Marion, daughter and heir of John Cochrane of Struthers, co. Lanark, married James Whyte of Stockbriggs, and died in 1771. Margaret, only child of John Cochrane of Ravelrig in MidLothian, married, in 1755, David Ross, a senator of the College of Justice, with the title of Lord Ankerville. The surname is taken from Cochrane in Renfrewshire. Waldeve de Cochrane witnessed a charter in 1262; William de Coughran, of the county of Lanark, swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296; David II. granted Pitfour and other lands to Roger de Cochrane, and for a time Pitfour was the property of a separate branch of the family. Lee in Renfrewshire and Ascog in Bute belonged to Cochranes during the whole of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Thomas of Cochran of Cousland had the Earldom of Mar t>y gift of James III., but was hanged, and forfeited.
George
sat in parliament for
Ayr
1585-97.
The
family of that
an heiress, Elizabeth, whose husband, Alexander Blair, assumed the surname and arms of Cochrane during the lifetime of Ilk ended in
their son was the first peer. In 167 1 Barbachlaw and his other lands were united and erected into a free barony for Alexander Cochrane of Barbachlaw, with a singular arrangement failing heirs male of his own body, the estate is settled on William the second, and Thomas the third sons of William
his father-in-law
;
:
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
6o
Lord Cochrane, there being no relationship Ixjtwccn the families. The " take upon heirs of tailzie are bound, under penalty of forfeiture, to them and bear the Sir-name of Cochrane, with the style and armes of Barbachlaw."
These bearings are given
MoNiPENNY.
L
the seal of William, 1467, is the same, with a peacock in his pride for crest, and two ladies as Seals of John of Pitmilly 1467, and David of Pitmilly supporters. not the dolphin quartering, nor is it used by various 1546, have other persons of the name whose seals are given by Mr Laing.
Thomas
in
;
of Kinkcll, 1415, has a chevron between the three cross crest a bird. crosslets issuing from crescents In 1449 Thomas has a stag's head as crest. ;
—
Porteus says Pitmilly sometimes bore a star argent in chief, sometimes a bordure engrailed argent. William I^rd Monypcnny sat in parliament as a peer 147 1 his son, Alexander Lord Monipenny, settled in I'rance, where the first lord had grants of land from Louis XL, and left no male issue. Pitmilly in Fife was held, it is said, from the thirteenth century the by Monypennys the last of the line, 1869, left the estate to a namesake, younger son of a Kentish family, said to be of Scottish ;
;
origin.
PLATE
10.
—
First line
Crawfurd of Grf,nnan.
A cross
engrailed is the bearing on the seal of Sir Gervase de I^it an 1292 early seal of John de Rait has a hunting horn, and that of Mr David Rait, 1591, has a cross invecked. W. gives quarterly sable and azure a crescent argent. The coat here represented was matriculated 1672-78 by William of Hallgreen Mr William of Pitforthie, a cadet at the same time has a hunting horn of the field stringed gules on the cross. The surname is taken from localities, and probably was assumed in different parts of the country by persons not related to one another. Rait in Nairn, Rait in Perth, Raith in Fife, and Raith in Ayrshire, may all have given a name to residents if not to owners. 1291, Sir Gerva.se de Rathe, Constable of Inverne.ss 1292, IL de Rathe; Sir Andrew de Rathe the legman Roll contains the names 1292-97, of Sir Gervase de Rate, Gervase I^t, and Sir Andrew de Rat of the county of Inverness, and Koj^cr de Rath of Ayrshire 1296. In 1332 John de Rate, the father, enters into an agreement with
Rait,
;
;
;
;
Abbot of Scone; Sir Alexander, 1335-69; Thomas de Rath, 1371 John de Rath, 1398.
the
;
Thomas de Rate had from David
II.
of Ures
charters in the fortieth year of his reign in Kincardineshire, to be held in free barony,
ARMORIAL DE BERRY,
6i
and of Balgillo in Forfarshire another of the barony in the first year of Robert II., and again to him, designed dilectus scuti/ernoster, and Margaret, his spouse, in the twelfth year of the reign of the same He was iVwA seven years later, when the superiority was king. ;
granted to Sir
Hugh
lie
Alt a.mkK
JNiih w.e.
i
Lindsay. .i|)|)(>iiii((l
coroner of the sheriflfdom of
Ayr
lown charter of confirmation second by Sir John Lindsay, and li.h Robert II. In 1492 Alexander Rnit possessed lands in Rait. David of Diuumagaa .ic(|uiicd Ilallgrccn, and had a charter 147 1, which was confirmed in 1478. This property gave a designation to his descendants, till it was sold in 1724 by William Rait of Hallgreen, who married Isobel, sister and heir of James Douglas of I
i
*
Bridgeford.
Futhes and Drumtochty, in 1440, belonged to John Rait; 1445, Henry, son of John; 1492, Robert of Drumtochty; 1491, Elizabeth, Lady of Futhes, is said, by Mr Jervise, to have married Hew Calder, and to have left a son, Alexander Galder of Drumtochty. Branches of the Hallgrcen family were seated at Cononsyth, Bryanton, Pitforthy, Findlaystoun, &c., and the representation is claimed by Rait of Anniston, co. Forfar. James was Abbot of Culross 1530. Archibald went to Poland in 1650, and in 1676 had a birth-brief showing his descent through Raits of Lentush, co.
Aberdeen, from Hallgreen. Mr James, advocate, acquired Edmonstone, near TTdlnburgh, of which he had a charter in 1630 to him and Eliza Foullcr, his wife; their son, James of Edmonstone, married a (huit-hler of il.iy of Anna .md Monkton, and was dead in 1667, leaving two (l.nij'Iih n.iior of the Elizabeth. The elder married John Wauchope, a College of Justice, with the style of LokI Lihuonstonc, and died in Her arms, registered c. 1672, and displayed at her funeral, are 1729. 1
.,
<
the undiffercnccd coat.
MONlI'IiNNY
OI'
PnMlLLY.
—
(?)
Second line Rattray. BoSWIiLL.
Glen. Third line Sandilands of Calder. WiSHART.
—
(?)
PLATE
11.
—
First line
William Ckawi'oru. M. Michel gives the seal 1406—a fess ermine with two mullets in between two horns
;
supporters
—two Q
/
of I^bert de Crawfurd, a mullet chief; crest
lions gardant.
—
ARMORIAL DE BERRY.
62
This coat was registered 1672-78 by Gilbert and a hundred years later, with a bordure gules for difference, by James Macvicar Affleck of Edinghame. It is cut in stone at Woodhill, with the addition of a hunt-
William Auckinleck.
Auchinleck of that Ilk, co. Forfar,
ing-horn in base, probably executed early in the seventeenth century. In 1809 Alexander Boswell of Auchinleck, co. Ayr, was allowed by Lyon to quarter Auchinleck as descended from Marion Auchinleck, wife of George Campbell of Loudoun. Affleck of Dalham, co. Suffolk, baronet of Great Britain, claims descent from Auchinleck of that Ilk in Forfarshire, and bears the arms, crest, and motto as registered by Gilbert. In 1296 Nicol de Achtheleg, of the county of Ayr, and Patrik de Aghlek, of the county of Lanark, swore fealty to Edward I. The lairds of Auchinleck sat in the general council 1441, and in parliament 1469-78-81-87, In 1296 Matheu le Naper de Aghelek, of Forfarshire, swore fealty to the King of England, and ten years later John de Aghelek also did homage for lands in the same shire can John have been the son of Matthew, and have assumed a surname from his lands ? ;
About 1445
John and James Auchinleck married Elizabeth and Giles Melville, sisters and coheiresses of Glenbervie the elder sister and her husband managed to retain the greater part of the estate their eldest son James married Giles Ross, and left a daughter and heir Elizabeth, as to whose rights and legitimacy there were suits, which were decided in her favour, and she carried the barony of GlenSir
;
;
bervie to the house of Douglas by her marriage to Sir William, younger son of Archibald Earl of Angus their descendants bore ;
argent, a cross embattled sable for Auchinleck, and this coat is given in L. for Auchinleck of that Ilk, and was also borne by Auchinleck of Balmanno, co. Perth, whose representative in 1630 was served heir male of Mr John, second son of Sir John above named, and uncle of the heiress, he being descended from a brother of Sir John. The cross has been said to have been the arms of Balmanno of that Ilk, assumed in consequence of marriage with the heiress there seems no evidence of this, as the cross was the coat taken by the descendants of the heiress of Glenbervie, while the marriage with Balmanno is said to have been contracted by the younger son, whose descendant became heir male. Of the Balmanno family were George, who married Mary, sister of James Earl of Morton, the regent, and of David Earl of Angus, and was shot dead, 1581, by William Bickerton of Cash; George, 1581-97 William, father of Sir George, a senator of the College of Sir William of Balmanno 1648, and Mr Justice 1626 to c. 1639 Archibald his brother, who is said by Sir Patrick Lyon of Carse to have married Anna, daughter of Arnot of Woodmill, and to have left a daughter Anna, heiress of the family, who married John Carnegie ;
;
;
of Kinnell.
ARMORIAL DE BERRY. To
63
return to the Forfarshire family: 1364, Gilbert of Auchinpayment from the Crown; 1441, James of that Ilk;
leck has a
Hugh
1495-1508,
of that Ilk
;
1558-69, Gilbert of that Ilk Robert his son Gilbert was served heir to him; ;
of that Ilk died in 1610, when 1665, Gilbert, heir to his father or grandfather Gilbert, in the barony of Auchinleck, registered arms, died 1692 Gilbert his son died 1722, ;
leaving a son, Gilbert,
who
sold the estate soon after.
EdingTiame came into the possession of the Affleck family about 1670. In the sixteenth century there were Auchinlecks of Cumledge, CO. Berwick, descended from Archibald, a younger son of Balmanno Auchinlecks of Schethine in Aberdeenshire Auchinlecks of Tweedie, CO. Lanark. Auchinleck in Ayrshire was lost by recognition, and to the ancestor of the Boswells, who have since held it. granted ;
;
William de Modreville.
(?)
The
seal of
John Finlay, alias Motherwell, described by Mr Laing as a saltire can-
vicar of Eastwood, c. 1550, is tonned with four roses or cinquefoils.
In 1296 fealty to
Adam
Edward
In the
de Moderual, of the county of Lanark, swore
I.
century persons of the name of Philip, a bailie of the
latter part of the sixteenth
Moderwell occur, connected with Renfrew, and burgh, was killed in 1556.
—
Second line John Sempill.
Alexander Magney. AbERCROMBIE.
v»*'***
&, (?)
^'
f^
f^'^
\
\!^
.5
III.
ROLL OF ARMS, BY
SIR
ROBERT FORMAN, LYON KING OF ARMS.
C, A.D.
R
1562.
Lauder of Bass. L. *Hepburne of Wauchton. CocKBURNE OF Langtone, as L., omitting the quartering of Vipont. ScoTTE OF BuLCLEUCHE or, on a bend azure a crescent between two ;
mullets of the
field.
*Ker of Phernihirst. Jhonstone of Lochewoode,
as L., Jhonstoun of that Ilk, but with the cushions pendant by the corner. Cranstone of that Ilk. L., both feet of the cranes rest on the ground.
Douglass of Drumlanrick, Touris of Inverleith. of tinctures
;
L., the hearts
uncrowned.
L., crescents instead of mullets,
and no marking
the seal of George Touris of Inverleith, a.d. 1632, has
mullets.
Prestoune of Craigmiller. L. Naper of Merchistoune. L., Napier alone without the blank quarters. Froster of Corstorphin. L. Dalmahoy of that Ilk. L. Sandelands of Calder. L. Lauder of Hatton. L., the beak only of the griffin is gules. Craufurd of Haining. L. *Menteith of Kerss. L., first and fourth, gules, a bend checquy argent and sable; second and third, azure, three round buckles or. The field of the Menteith coat
is
so invariably or, that gules can only be looked
on as an error in colouring. Logane of Restalrick. L., in the second and is sable,
third quarters the field
the eagle argent.
Herring of Gilmertoune,
L.,
an additional cinquefoil on the bend
in
chief.
Sainct Clair of Rosling. L., no mullet on the cross. Pennicuke of that Ilk. L. Wardlaw of Vamstoune, as Wardlaw of Richartoune,
L.,
with the
mascles argent.
Fairlie of Braied.
L.,
a lion rampant debruised of a ribband sinister,
tinctures not marked.
Creightoune of Bruntstoune. L., ermine, a lion rampant azure. Clepen of Carslogen. L., argent, a lion rampant gules crowned or. Fausyde of that Ilk. L. Campbell of Loudoune. L. * Murray of Blackbarony. Giffart of Shriffhall. L., ermine, three bars gules, a bordure of the last.
Steuarte of Craigiehall.
L. 87, no buckles in chief.
FORMAN'S ROLL,
68
Balfour of Monquhanie. head couped
L.,
argent on a chevron sable an otter's couped of the second.
of the field, in base a saltire
•Hepburne of Quhitstoune. BiNNINGE OF THAT IlK. L. Balfoure of Carrestoune. L. ScRYMGEOUR OF DiDHOUPE. L., or, a lion rampant gules holding in his dexter forepaw a sword bendways argent. Ramsay of Dalhousie. L. Wallace of Cragie. L., in the first and fourth quarters the field is or and the lion gules. Blair of Adamtoune. L., argent, on a saltire engrailed sable nine mascles of the
field.
Mureheide of Lauchope. L., argent, on a bend azure a mullet between two acorns or. Kneland of that Ilk, L., the hare is or. *Gresonne of Lage. This family has twice changed its bearings. The Robert Grierson of Lag, 14 18, has a lion rampant gardant crowned. Sir David Lindsay, and other authorities, give what may be called an Annandale coat gules, a saltire and chief argent, the latter charged with three cushions of the field. Forman is the earliest authority for the present arms, which were registered 1672-78 by Robert of Lag, substituting a mullet for the crescent on the fess. *Edzar of that Ilk. Nisbet describes the arms of the family of Edgar, cut on a stone at their house of Wedderlie, co. Berwick, as a lion rampant quartering three water bougets for Ross of Sanquhar, supported by two greyhounds. These arms are not recorded, but the silver lion in a field sable with differences is recorded, 1672-80, by two cadets. Admiral Edgar, the last of the direct line of Wedderlie, used on his seal the lion rampant without the quartering, with the seal of
—
supporters.
The surname
met with at an early period in Nithsdale and in the Merse, and may have become the surname of the descendants of any person of the name of Edgar. It is conjectured that the lion rampant indicated descent from, or dependence on, the Earls of Dunbar and March perhaps connection by marriage, as Sir Patrick is
;
Edgar, who
held lands in Lennel in 1272, married Mariota de Home. Robert I. granted several charters to Edgars or Edzars, chiefly of lands in Dumfriesshire, one being to Richard of half the barony of Sanquhar, with the place thereof, the other half being held by William de Crichton.
Donald Edzear had a charter from David II. of the captainship Wedderlie certainly was held by the Clan Macgowin. of Edgars in 1376, and was sold in 1733 by John, whose son, RearAdmiral Alexander Edgar, died in 1817, leaving an only child, Sophia Bathia, who married, first, Captain Robert Campbell, R.N. second, Alexander Tait, LL.D. The representation in the male line has been claimed by several the
;
families.
FORMAN'S ROLL.
69
In 1873 there was published "An Account of the Sirname of Edgar," by Captain Lawrence-Archer, a descendant through a female. John of Wedderlie sat in parliament for Berwickshire 1681,
Edward Edgar 1
for
Edinburgh 1640, and Alexander
for
Haddington
696- 707. 1
Ramsay of Culluthie.
argent instead of lozenges
Ogilvey of Findlatour. played sable
;
second and third quarters mascles
in the
L.,
or.
L., first
and
an eagle
fourth, argent,
dis-
second and third, argent, a lion passant gules.
Mertyne of Medope.
L.
Carnagie of Kinhaird. L. MONCREIFFE OF THAT IlK. L. Menzies of Castellhill. As L., Menzies of Enouch. DuRiE OF THAT Ilk. L., azure, a chevron between three WooDE OF BoLNETOUNE. As L., Wod of Blairtouu.
crescents argent.
Brechinge. L., the piles are in point. LouELL OF Ballumbie. L., the bar wavy surmounts the piles which are in point, and is narrower. FOUILLES OF CoLINGTOUNE. L. Iruing of Drume. L. Haddoune of Gleneiggies. L., the saltire in the second quarter is enthe saltire is grailed, a mistake which has been frequently repeated for Lennox, and plain. An early seal of Ranulf de Haudene has as ;
his paternal coat a saltire between four stars
the stars being dropped and the saltire engrailed, the bearing became identical with that of
Colquhoun. of Sauchie.
Shaw
;
L.
*Weymies of that Ilk. Weymies of Rereis. L.,
first
and
rampant within a borargent, a bend azure.
fourth, a lion
marked second and third, CoLVEiLL OF Ester Vymeis. L. Lundey of Balgonie. L., in the first and fourth quarters, gules, three pallets argent, instead of paly of six gules and argent. Anstruther of that Ilk. L., the piles are in point. Meldrum of Fyvie. L. Murray of Tullebardin, as L., Murray of Balvaird. *Balfour of that Ilk. Innes of that Ilk. L., in the first and fourth quarters the field is gules, dure, no tinctures
;
the heads argent.
Scotte of Baluerey. L., the field is or. Ingleis of Lochend. L. Kenedey of Blanquhain. L., in the first and fourth quarters the crosses are gules, and in the second and third the lion is not crowned.
Ross OF Montgreane.
Calhoune of Lusse.
L., the field is argent.
L.
FORMAN'S ROLL,
70
AucHiNLECK OF THAT Ilk. L., the CFOSs is represented as if countercompony argent and sable. •Dalzeill of that Ilk. BosuELL OF Balmonto. L., first and fourth, or, a Hon rampant gules ;
second and third, argent, on a fess sable three cinquefoils of the
field.
*Chartreis of Emptsfeilde. L. *Chartreis of Lonefenan. L. These Charteris coats are given nearly the same by Sir David reason to believe that alterations have been made on his MS. Amisfield is possibly an addition at any rate it is on one of the smaller shields, inserted in the centre of the four which usually occupy a page, and it has the tressure, which did not then belong to that family. The other was originally Hempesfelde, but a line has been drawn through this word and Kinfaunis added The great family of Charteris of below in a more modern hand.
Lindsay, but there
is
;
Kinfauns, Lumphannan, and Canglour, on which latter estate, which is in Stirlingshire, there was a family mansion named Charteris Hall or House anciently, certainly carried the Royal tressure, as appears In 1584 John Charteris of Kinfauns formally from many seals. adopted Henry Lindsay, afterwards Earl of Crawford, who had married Beatrix Charteris, and made over to him the whole of his the great estate in fee, making it a condition that he should assume
surname and arms of Charteris of Kinfauns only. This agreement was ratified by Parliament three years later, and Henry was styled Charteris, fiar of Kinfauns, although John Charteris lived on into the seventeenth century. Sir James Balfour, the MS. called Workman's, and other authorities, give the plain fess for Amisfield and the tressure to Kinfauns, and the Lyon Register, c. 1672, contains an a fess entry of the arms of Sir John Charters of Hempsfield argent,
—
azure.
When
Colonel Francis Charteris, said to be heir male of Amis-
died, his daughter, the Countess of Wemyss, put up on his house in Edinburgh an escutcheon of his alleged arms. Proceedings field,
were taken against her ladyship and her husband in the Lyon Court, and in August 1732 they were fined and the arms pulled down, as they "belong to another family which the said Colonel Francis Charteris does noways represent." Some twenty years later the Lord Lyon was found more pliable, and the coveted Royal tressure was matriculated as part of the arms of the Hon. Francis Charteris of Amisfield, second son of the Countess of Wemyss, and successor to the estates of his maternal grandfather. At the same time the old crest and motto an arm issuing out of a cloud holding a sword aloft proper, Nott gladio sed gratid" were changed to a dexter hand holding a dagger paleway proper. This is our charter. Robert of Amisfield, co. Dumfries, was in parliament 1481 Mr Thomas of Charteris, Chancellor of Scotland 1288-90, had a grant of
—
''
—
;
FORMA N'S the ward of Amisfield
;
Sir
ROLL.
Thomas had a
71
charter of Kinfauns from
and was made Chancellor 1340. Amisfield was erected into a barony 1613, and was,
David
II.,
till
recently,
the property of the heir general of the direct line of the family had assumed the surname of Charteris.
Douglass of Lochleuin. were parted per
L.,
the chief
is
represented as
if
who
the shield
fess indented.
Cheine of Aslonan.
unfinished apparently. L., the crescent is vert, the field parted per
L., this coat is
Hendersoune of Fordell.
and argent. *Chirnsyd of East Nisbet. Balfour's blazon is azure, three moriscoes' heads erased argent Pont has or, or argent, three women's heads sable attired azure. The surname is taken from a locality in Berwickpale dancetty sable
;
shire.
Mr Hugh
de Chirnside was
official
of Teviotdale 1306, and
Mr
probably the same person, is named 1316-24; Hugh, 1328; Laurence, a merchant, had English safe-conducts 1362-4-5, and was custumar of Dunbar 1372 his son Thomas was dead in 1393, when his property fell to the Crown by reason of bastardy. John Chirnsyde had a charter from Robert III. of Fowllerland
Hugh,
clerk,
;
Whitsome, on the resignation of John Nisbet; John, 1428; John Whitsome; Alexander had married before 1479 Elizabeth Nisbet, and probably acquired East Nisbet with her; Ninian of East Nisbet 1530; William of East Nisbet 1567; Sir Patrick, in November 1615, carried off from Haddington Adam French of Thornydikes, a boy of fourteen, confined him at East Nisbet, carried him to Berwick, and there married him to his own daughter Jean. For this he was prosecuted, but the youthful bridegroom having declared that he went of his own free will, the matter was allowed to in
of
drop.
Alexander of East Nisbet, son of Sir Patrick, was dead before 1643, leaving Alexander, who d.s.p., and Captain David, who, in 1652, was served heir in West Whitsomelaws William was in the French service 1552; Mr William was parson of Luss 1581 Robert represented Glasgow in parliament 1593; Robert of Over Possil was commissary of Glasgow 1602; Ninian perished when Dunglas Castle was blown up. Hay of Boyne. L., argent, three inescutcheons gules. Hay of Levies. L. Douglass of Kilspindie. The simple coat of Douglas with the heart uncrowned. Leuingstoune of Manerstoune. L. LiNDESAY OF CouiNGTOUNE. L., the field vert. Mure of Ruallan. L., the tincture of the mullets not marked.. Hoppringell of that Ilk. Argent, on a bend sable three round ;
;
buckles or
;
apparently a Stirling coat.
Balfoure of Burley.
L.
FORMA N'S
72
Mackmath of that
Ilk.
not marked;
the
is
ROLL.
L. I29^ Makknaucht, the tincture of the field inescutcheon is gules charged with a cross
argent.
876 Alexander Milne Ogston of Ardoe, CO. Kincardine, Esquire, proved his pedigree as heir male of this him by the Lyon King of family, and the coat was confirmed to Arms, the blazon being argent, three mascles sable, on a chief of the second two lions passant of the first armed and langued gules. This is as it appears on seals of the commencement of the sixteenth cenas a quartering of Douglas of tury, and in the Lyon Register
OuGSTOUNE OF THAT
Ilk.
In
1
—
Tilwhilly.
The MSS.
generally
make
the shield parted per fess and the
lions rampant.
various bearing of the arms is shown in the illustrations to Genealogical History of the Families of Ogston from their first
The
"
A
Privately printed. appearance, circa a.d. 1200." Edinburgh, 1876. careful and accurate work, interesting as showing the vicissitudes of an old family which, after its estates had passed away from it by marriage and sale, has regained in the present day a position among
A
the landowners of the district in which it long flourished. The surname is taken from lands in Morayshire.
Symon
de
Hogeston entered into an agreement with Andrew Bishop of Moray, c. 1230; John de Ogiston was steward to Walter de Moravia 1240; Alexander de Ogeston, in 1296, swore fealty to Edward I. In 1473 Alexander Ogstoun of that Ilk sold Ogstoun to John Innes of that Ilk his son and heir, John of Crag, was sheriff of ;
Walter, son of John, took the designation of that Elizabeth, married Ilk, and died 1489, leaving two daughters coheirs Sir Adam Hepburn, master of the king's stables, and Janet, (?) married George Haly burton of Gask. George Ogstoun, cousin-german of these ladies, acquired Auchmacludy, co. Aberdeen, by marriage, c. 1550, with Elizabeth Murray;
Aberdeenshire
—
;
William, fourth of Auchmacludy, left a daughter and heir. Christian, who married in 1691 Alexander Reid from her uncle the existing ;
family of Ogston descends.
David marriage,
acquired Tilwhilly in Kincardineshire by 1479, with Janet Ogstoun, and their descendants
Douglas c.
quartered Ogstoun.
Thomas Ogstoun
possessed the Kirklands of Fettercairn,
c.
these lands were sold by Walter in 161 5. Ballenden of Auchenone. L.
1470
;
Spreuell of Coldoune. L. Glendining of Partounte. L., of that Ilk. Leirmound of that Ilk. L., as Dersye.
Wardlaw
of Torrie.
L., in the
second and third quarters the
argent, the water bougets sable.
*Tosheavch of Moneyvairde.
field is
FORMAN'S
ROLL,
jt,
*Lasone of Humbie. BissET OF THAT Ilk. L., argent, a bend gules. Tendell. L. *CuMEiN OF Alter. Maxswell of Calderuoode. L., the chief argent, three Balzie of Lamingtoune. L., sable, eight mullets, three,
pallets sable.
three
and two
argent.
Jardin of Apilgirth. L., the stars on the chief are omitted. Macklenane of Bombie. L. RUTHERFURDE OF THAT IlK. L. *RiDDELL. Seal of Patrick de Ridale, c. 1 170, a lion passant
;
of his son
Walter, c. 1175, an eagle with wings expanded. The MSS. give a chevron between three boys' heads or holly branches, or ears of rye. Walter of that Ilk, in 1566, seals with a chevron between three ears of rye.
The surname is Norman, and is one of those which are on the Roll of Battle Abbey Ridel seigneur de Mord, near Rouen, bore
—
;
gules, three lions' heads or. Geoffrey Ridell, lord of Wittering, Northants,
was a baron by
tenure and justice of England in the reign of Henry I. the descendants of his daughter and heir, Maud, wife of Richard Basset, assumed the surname of Ridell. ;
Arms
Ridel of Bedfordshire, in the reign of Edward II. gules, abend sable; of Sir William of Westmoreland at the same time gules, a lion within a bordure indented argent. Gervase Riddel settled in Scotland before 11 16, and was sheriff of Roxburghshire Walter de Riddale had a charter from David I. of Sir
John —paly argent and
—
;
before
1153 certainly, probably considerably
earlier,
of Whitunes,
half of Escheto, and Lilislive, &:c., which is the oldest charter to a layman known to be in existence in Scotland.
His brother and
SirAnsketin, 1155, was the direct ancestor Buchanan Riddell of that Ilk, baronet. The family early acquired the other half of Lilislive, and the whole came to be called Riddell and was erected into a barony the estate was sold about 1820. A separate branch was founded by heir,
of the present Sir Walter
;
Hugh, who possessed Cranston, known 1
as Cranston-riddell, before
160.
—
Arms
registered for Riddell of Riddell argent, a chevron gules between three ears of rye slipped and bladed proper crest a demi-
—
;
"
"
—
—
I motto grey hound proper supporters two hope to share " Hab shar," as greyhounds argent collared gules. The motto is recorded in 1783 by Walter of Glenriddell, a cadet. In 1765 George and his third brother of Riddell Riddell, M.D., James, Lodge, co. Berwick, and of Belton in Suffolk, the former representative of Rid;
dell of Kinglass, in
that Ilk with
motto—
"
West
Lothian, registered the arms of Riddell of
marks of cadency
Right
to share."
;
crest
—a
demi-greyhound argent In 1775, James, then of Ardnamurchan ;
;
FORMAN'S ROLL.
74
Riddell Lodge, Belton, &c., again recorded these arms, being granted supporters (although he was not the representative even of his own branch of the family) a female figure, the emblem of agriculture, and a male figure, the emblem of honour, and
and Sunart,
co. Argyll,
an additional motto,
Mr
was
Riddell
"
Utile et duke."
created a baronet in 1778
;
and
in
1796
— on
set-
ting forth a totally different pedigree, showing that John of Sallowes in Norfolk, a descendant of the Ridells of Wittering, sold that
Scotland in the reign of James VI., and was grandfather of James, first of Kinglass was allowed by the Lord Lyon to discontinue the use of the arms, crest, and motto of the Roxburghshire Riddells, and to bear or, three piles in point gules surmounted of a bend azure, with several quarterings, one of them being Barry wavy of six or and gules for Bassett crest a hand issuing from the coronet of a French count holding a baton proper; supporters as " De Apulia " and " C/lile et dulce" Very shortly before; mottoes before the discarded pedigree had been published in Douglas's estate, settled in
—
—
—
;
—
Baronage.
The arms
of the Bassets, barons of Weldon, descended from Maud Riddell, were or, three piles gules within a bordure sable bezantde; of the Bassets, barons of Drayton, also descended from her or, three piles in point gules, a canton ermine. Arms of Riddell of Swinburne, in Northumberland argent, a fess between three rye sheaves azure.
—
—
—
FoRSYTHE OF Nydie. L., the griffins are sable. LOCKARTE OF BaR. L. *Mackdouell of Garthland. Argent, on a chief
sable a mullet on a
dexter side or.
Argent, nearly the same as L. Squyare. Strange of Pitgarthie. L.
Haldingtoune of that is
Ilk.
L., the crosslets are sable,
and the cross
charged with a mullet argent.
Douglass of Langnuthrie. L. CoRSBEY OF THAT Ilk. L., the cross is argent. *Balkaskie of that Ilk. Syntoune of that. Ilk. L., Symondtoune, no
mullet.
Gules, a saltire argent on a chief of the second three cushions of the first pendant by the corner. Greirson. (?) a chevron between three mullets gules. (?) Arnot. Argent,
Chalmer. L., Gathgirth, the field of Heriote of Trabroune. L.
the
first
and fourth quarters
Murray of Philipehaughe. L. *Wansse of that Ilk. BissET of that Ilk. As before. *Steuarte of Gairnetullie. PiTTBLADDO OF THAT Ilk. L., the boar's head is couped. •Quhytelaw of that Ilk. A mistake for Whitehead.
is
gules.
FORMA N'S
ROLL.
75
Steuarte of Garleis. L. *Spenss of Varmestoune. Vide post. Ramsay of Dunone. L., the crescents are
placed in the usual way, i.e., with their horns towards the dexter chief. Blair of Adamtoune. L. *Rosse of Kinfaunis. Three water bougets no tinctures given. Sir James Balfour gives the f^eld azure, the charges or. MoRTiMEiR OF Wambeth. L. (?) Mortimer of Auchinbady, an old Banffshire family, whose arms were registered, c. 1680, as paly of six argent and azure, a lion rampant sable powdered with tears. George, ;
the last owner in the direct male heiresses,
another,
whom
one of
Thomas
Keir, one of the King's trumpeters.
*Dalrumpell. Broune of Fordell. gules,
which
is
married
died in 17 16, leaving coDavid Erskine, a shoemaker; line,
The
tincture of the field
is
altered from sable to
a mistake.
Adam Brown was
killed at the battle of Falkirk 1298 the lands of Aberdeen descended to his grandson. Sir ;
he held of the Bishop John, sheriff of the county of Aberdeen 1328. John Brown of Midmar, son of Sir John, was ancestor of George, Bishop of Dunkeld 1484-1514, whose arms, illuminated in his Life by Abbot Myln, are sable, a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis argent. The bishop granted Fordell, co. Perth, in 1493, to his brother Richard, whose descendants bore azure, a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis or. The direct male line ended with John Brown, son
—
—
and heir of Sir John of Fordell and Rossie, Major-General, and representative in parliament of the county of Perth, who was mortally
wounded
at Inverkeithing 165 1.
Antonia Brown of Rossie, co. Fife, Sir John's eventual heiress, married Alexander Dunlop of Dunlop, co. Ayr. Brown of Finmount, co. Fife, an estate acquired in 1596 and sold c. 1 7 10, became heir male; and of this branch, which charged the chevron with a crescent sable, descendants exist. The families of Horn, Westhorn, Hangingside, and Sir William
Brown, created a baronet 1699, were cadets of Fordell, and bore the field azure, which distinguishes them from the branches of Colstoun. *Cairness of Orchattoun. Melueill of Raithe. L. Balbirney of that Ilk. L. Mackculloch of Cardneis. L. HOGGE. L. DUDINGSTOUNE OF SOUTHOUS. L. *DUNS OF THAT IlK. "
*RiNUE
(it
should be Reid) of
*Sainteclaire of Blansse. RippET of that Ilk. L. *Wallace of Ellersley.
Coustoune
(or Colliston).
FORMAN'S ROLL,
76 Harkes.
chevron and fleurs-de-lis are
L., the
MiCHELL. Kempe of Thomestoune.
L., there are
or.
only one arm and hand.
Pringell of Burnehouss. L., the field and escallops are or. Rentoune of Billie. L. WOODE OF CrAIGE. L. Woode OF BoNETOUNE. L., no crosslets. , Abercrombie of that Ilk. L. WiNTOUNE OF THAT IlK. L. DURHAME OF MONEFEITH of oldc. *Ffalconer of Halcartoune. The coat armour of this ancient family, whose ancestor, Willelmus Auceps, grants a piece of land near Halkerton to the Abbey of Arbroath, shortly before the year 1200, has undergone various mutations. The seal of Robert le Faulconer of the county of Kincardine, appended to his deed of homage to Edward Sir David Lyndsay gives gules, I., has a falcon striking a bird.
Sir Robert Forman gules, a chevron argent three hawks' lures or between three pairs of wings conjoined in lure or, which has also the Another modification appears in an authority of Sir James Balfour. ;
made
Workman's MS.
without indication of tincchevron between three falcons' tures, and probably about In Balfour's time however, if not earlier, another heads erased. alteration took place (L. II. and Font's MS., a.d. 1624) to or, a falcon's head proper, issuing from a heart gules, between three mullets azure. This coat, with appropriate marks of cadency, was Its head proregistered 1672-85 by several cadets of the family. bably altered the coat when created Lord Falconer of Halkerton in David, fifth lord, registered in 1733 azure, a falcon dis1647. played between three stars argent, and on his breast a man's heart The funeral entries supply evidence that this was borne by gules. Alexander, second lord, who died in 1684, with the addition that the falcon is crowned with an antique crown or. In Douglas's Peerage, Jane, sister and heir of David, third Lord Falconer, is omitted she married in 1706 James Forbes of Thorn-
addition
to
in ink,
1600— a
—
—
;
James Ouchterlony, bailie of Montrose. fifth lord, was a merchant in Cadiz and in Edinburgh, married Janet, daughter of John Marjoribanks of Leuchie their son George inherited Carlowrie on the death of his uncle, Major-General Alexander Marjoribanks, 13th December 1773, died 19th December 1789, and was succeeded by his nephew, David ton,
and had issue
secondly, George, brother of the ;
;
of Carlowrie, who married, 1796, Jane, daughter of Robert Stewart of Binny. Captain George Falconar of Carlowrie, their son, married Frances Georgina, daughter of George Mercer of Gorthie and Dryden, and was father of the present George Mercer (Falconar) Stewart of Binny, co. Linlithgow. Several members of the family of Falconer held the office of Master or Warden of the Mint, and on that account had bezants or plates
added
to their
arms as a
difference.
FORMA N'S
ROLL.
y^
Clapen of that Ilk. As before for Clepen of Carslogen. *Spens of Varmestoune. The date 1572 is added below. The variations and changes in the Spens' coats require a
detailed
account ; Sir David Lindsay gives for the Lathallan family arms entirely different from either of the coats in this roll, viz., gyronny of eight argent and azure, an inescutcheon gules surcharged of another inescutcheon of the first, on which is a lion's head erased sable. Sir
James Balfour calls the quartered coat the old one of the Wormiston family, and describes the charges in the first and fourth quarters as " hung locks." The coat with the lion and bend he calls Spens of Wormiston " of laite." In Laing's Collection of Seals are two of 1431-1444 fretty on a chief indented (or dancetty) three roses or cinquefoils this appears to be the oldest bearing of the family, and was carried to
—
;
France by cadets who settled on a chief three roses.
there,
being
John Spens of Condie, advocate
to
now
described as lozengy,
Queen Mary,
seals with a
chevron between three boars' heads erased, a thistle stalked and leaved being placed on the chevron.
When
Lyon Register was formed
in 1672, two of the Lathallan family registered the coat with the lion and bend, which makes its appearance on a seal of David Spens 1549 but Spense of Berri-
the
;
hole, although stated to descend from Lathallan, is allowed a boar's head erased between two barrulets. In 1764 Thomas Spens of
Lathallan recorded the bend without the lion, adding two boars' heads erased one in chief and one in base four years later he again entered arms, the lion and bend, and adding a Campbell quartering. Finally, in 1780, he once more registered his coat, dropping the bend and surrounding the lion with a bordure gules charged with eight roses argent, to indicate descent from the Dunbars of Kilconquhar. Guthrie of that Ilk. L. ;
*Bettoune of Creigh. Ogill of Popill. L., the field is argent and the birds are martlets. As Keir in L., the buckles argent. Streveling of Otterbourne of Reidhall. L. Blairgaine. As Blair of Angus in L. some of the MSS. say Blair •
.
;
of
Polcack. '
Gresoune, L. Ross of Balnagouen.
,
As
L.,
Ross of Montgrenane,
for
be intended, as Balnagowan bore three lions rampant. Leuke of that Ilk. L., Lecre it should be Leckie. ;
Anande of that
Ilk.
L.
*Steuarte of Banespick. Bruce of Clacmannan. L., *Tenand of that Ilk. *Turnebull of that Ilk.
Kenedey of
.
L.,
the field
Bargany. u
is
argent.
which
it
must
FORMAN'S ROLL.
78
LouES OF Maner. L., argent, three laurel leaves vert. Hamilton of Silvertounehill. Gules, three cinquefoils dure gyronny of eight ermine and of the
Hamilton of Sanquhair. GoRDOUNE OF LocHiNUAR.
Murray of Craufurde
argent, a bor-
field.
and tressure argent. the bend and boars' heads argent. L., Tyneures. L., the field and mullets argent. of Drongane. L.
Petegreue.
L., the cinquefoils
L.
Banantyne of Corhousse. L. Sutherland of Duffus. L., the boar's head argent. *Wardlaw of Warrestoune. •Gaudine of that Ilk. Steuarte of Butte. The simple coat of Stewart. Steuarte of Ralestoune. L., the lion appears to be Bettoune of Balfour. L. Talzifer of *Kincaide of that
gardant.
L.
.
Ilk.
L.,
arms on the seal of Edward,
sheriff-depute of
Edinburgh 1521, and on that of James,younger of Kincaid 1581 ermine between two mullets in chief, and a castle triple towered
The
—a
fess
in base.
son of Stephen, portioner of Broughton 1582, has merely a castle triple towered on a mount, being nearly the arms of the burgh of Edinburgh. seal of Robert,
—
arms as in L. crest a castle triple towered, argent masoned sable, and issuing therefrom a dexter arm embowed vested in tartan, grasping a drawn broadsword " " This I'll defend supporters two Highlanders proper motto in tartan armed with steel cuirasses, each holding a Lochaber axe in his dexter hand proper. John Lennox Kincaid-Lennox of Woodhead, and Kincaid, heirgeneral of Lennox of Woodhead, founded by Donald, natural son of Duncan, last Earl of Lennox, who had a charter of the lands of Ballegrochy, which was confirmed by Isabella, Duchess of Albany, Countess of Lennox 1444, recorded arms in 1833 first and fourth, Lennox unsecond and third, Kincaid crests two broadswords in differenced " I'll desaltire behind an imperial crown proper, with the motto " fend for Lennox that of Kincaid as before (the old crest, as registered by John of Woodhead 1672-78, was a swan's neck erased two savages wreathed about the head proper); the Lennox supporters and middle with oak leaves, holding clubs erect proper. Mr KincaidLennox died in 1859, and his eldest daughter and heir married, first, George Viscount Strangford secondly, Hon. Charles Spencer Hanbury, who has assumed the additional surnames of Kincaid-Lennox. In 1776 the Right Honourable Alexander Kincaid, provost of the city of Edinburgh, His Majesty's printer and stationer for Scotland, who had married Wilhelmina Carolina, daughter of Lord Charles Kerr of Cramond, director of Chancery, son of the first Marquess of Lothian, recorded a coat composed with that of Kerr, John of
that Ilk, in 1808, registered the
—
;
;
—
;
—
;
—
;
;
;
—
;
—
FORMAN'S ROLL.
79
although he was representative of a branch of Kincaid of that Ilk, seated at Bantaskine, co. Stirling, as early as 1450 gules, on a chevron argent three stars of the field, in chief two spur rowels or, in base a castle of the second masoned sable a dexter arm crest motto " I from the elbow holding a drawn broadsword proper will defend." Mr Kincaid having died, 21st January 1777, while chief magistrate, was interred with great pomp. His funeral was attended by the Duke of Buccleuch, the Marquess of Lothian, the Earl of Home, and many other persons of rank in the procession were the macer of the Lyon Court in deep mourning and bareheaded, four heralds, four pursuivants, and a man carrying his lordship's rod of office, which the senior herald broke, and dropped the pieces upon " Thus it hath pleased Almighty God to remove the coffin, saying, from this life to a better our worthy chief magistrate, the Right Honourable Alexander Kincaid, lord provost of this city, representative of the family of Bantaskine." His eldest son, Alexander, succeeded
— —
;
—
;
;
him as
and stationer to the king. The surname is taken from lands in Stirlingshire printer
still
held by
the heiress of the family. The laird attended parliament as deputyconstable 1534 James of that Ilk was knighted c. 1608. It has been ;
alleged that the Kincaids were, in the reign of Edward I., and for several generations, constables of the Castle of Edinburgh, but this
not the case. In the list of governors and constables given in the Extracts from the Records of the Burgh," are William de Kinghorn 1284-92, Sir John de Kingston 1301-5-34, and Thomas Kingston 1337 these names may have been taken for Kincaid. David Kincaid of Coittis, however, was constable in 1542. David Kincaid was bailie of Edinburgh 1467, and David again a is
"
;
Branches possessed Warriston, Craighouse, Over Gogar, &c., near Edinburgh. John of Warriston was murdered in July a 1600 by groom, at the instigation of his wife, Jean Livingstone, of the Dunipace family, for which she was beheaded and he was broken on the wheel. The Kincaids of Auchenreoch became united by marriage with the family of Buchanan of Carbeth Thomas, a cadet of Auchenreoch, was an eminent surgeon in Edinburgh, and died in 1691, leaving issue he had registered arms with three mullets in chief and a lozenge gules on the fess the crest a hand holding a bistoury, and motto " Incidendo sano," are professional. In 157 1 there was a feud between the lairds of Kincaid and Woodhead, the families now united On 17th September the Kincaids attacked John by marriage. " he Lennox, being solitar at his prayers beside his dwelling-place of Wodheid," and took him off a prisoner to Kincaid, after wounding and hurting him in several places. The Kincaids had also a quarrel with the Stirlings of Craigbarnet, and in a fight in Glasgow, in 1563, Malcolm Kincaid had his left arm cut off, and afterwards was killed, having in the interim taken part in the assault on John Lennox. bailie 1493.
;
;
—
;
—
FORMAN'S ROLL,
8o
Murray of Balvairde.
Sable, three mullets argent
;
the coat generally
given for Murray of Cowbin.
heads couped does not appear to have been long borne by the argent, a coat which on the seal, 1590, of William Broun, heir family, but is to be found The seals of John Broun in of Sir David Broun, vicar of Edzell. the vicar of Edzell) 1547, both conBroun David (? 1528, and Sir nected with Forfarshire, have a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis. David Broun of Colstoun, a.d. 1374, seals with a lion rampant, which was also used by Patrick of Colstoun 1574-97. As the chevron and fleurs-de-lis were carried by George, Bishop of Dunkeld, a native of Dundee, but descended from the Browns of Midmar, who died in 15 14, it would almost seem as if the Colstoun Brouns, after dropping their lion rampant, and for a time bearing
Broune of Colstoune.
L.,
viz.,
sable,
three
boars'
three boars' heads, adopted the coat of their namesakes in the north, with a change of tincture.
The
Lyon Register, c. 1672, for Patrick of Colstoun, three fleurs-de-lis or the dropping of the between a chevron is ^gules, chevron is a modern fancy, which has never been sanctioned by the Lyon Court. The writer is indebted to the late Mr Alexander Sinclair for proof of a fact which seems never to have appeared in print, that the later Brouns of Colstoun were paternally Hamiltons.
—
coat in the
;
Two
deeds mention Elizabeth, daughter and heir of William Broun of Colstoun, and spouse of James Hamilton and in 1548, her son and successor, John Broun of Colstoun. John, son of David Broun, had a charter of Colstoun from ;
David IL George of Colstoun
sat in parliament 1560; Sir
William Broun,
the present representative in the male line and Lady Susan Broun-Bourke of Colstoun, is heir of line. Streuelinge of C adder. L., the bend is azure and the buckles argent. There has been all along an uncertainty as to the tinctures of the Bart., is
;
and the entry made about 1672, in the name of Sir John Stirling of Keir, seems to show that the puzzle was insoluble, even by that accomplished herald Sir Charles Erskine. It is argent, on a bend azure (or rather sable), three buckles or; and " It is to be observed that in the old books this there is added bend is found, for the most part, ingrailed and not plane, and when plane it is mostly sable, for if it be born plane and azur it is the same with the armes of Lesly." The Lyon Office possesses a MS. by one
arms of the
Stirlings,
—
:
of the heralds present at Holyrood House, when Sir George Stirling He gives an account of the of Keir was knighted, 2nd June 1662.
ceremony, aad states that the arms were extracted by Thomas Drysdale, Islay Herald, and were argent, on a bend engrailed sable three buckles or. The arms of eight Stirlings are registered with the bend engrailed azure. Drumpellier has the bend sable with buckles
—
argent,
and
in
no instance
is
the bend vert recorded.
FORMAN'S "
ROLL.
8i
The
Stirlings of Keir and their Family Papers," by William Fraser, printed for private circulation, gives the history of that "Comments" on it by John Riddell, advocate, i860, also family. printed for private circulation, go into the representation of the StirCadder was held lings of Cadder by Mr Stirling of Drumpellier. family, c. 1220 Sir Alexander, and several others of the name, did homage to Edward I. 1292-96. It seems proved that Dominus
by the
;
Johannes de Strivelyn, sheriff of Stirling, was the fourth of the race who had held that office from the time of Toraldus Vicecomes, witAndrew of Cadder died in ness, ante 1 147, to a charter of David I. an 1522, leaving only child, Janet, who married Sir James Stirling
who
of Keir,
divorced her 1541, but kept possession of the estates. Janet married, secondly, Thomas Bishop of Ochiltree, co. Linlithgow, who had a grant of the Manor of Pocklington, co. York, from Henry VIII. The writer was the first to point out, in an article in the " Herald and Genealogist," that there were deeighth volume of the scendants of the second marriage who, if not extinct, are heirs general of Stirling of Cadder. In 1818 Andrew Stirling of Drumpellier was recognised by the
Lyon Court
as heir male,
and chained
collared
and allowed supporters
—two
bulls proper
or.
John de Strivelin acquired Rathoran by marriage with Mary, aunt of John, Lord of Lome, ante 1338; their grandson, Luke Stirling, acquired Keir 1448, which was erected into a barony 1473, and in 1 49 1 the laird of Keir sat in parliament. Cadder was an instance of what is very rare in Scotland a barony held of a subject, viz., of the Bishops of Glasgow. The seals of William and John de Stirling, 1292, are three buckles on a chief; at the same time Sir John has six stars three, two, and one his, the Glenesk family, ended in coheirs, who married Lindsay and Robert de Atholia. In 1492 William of Cadder uses three buckles on a bend, with a swan's head, neck, and wings issuing from a coronet as crest. The seals of the early Stirlings of Keir, from 1448 to 1579, are all three buckles on a plain bend, but in 1580, and subsequently, the
—
—
;
bend
is
engrailed. seal of Sir William, late in the thirteenth century, has
The
two
lions as supporters.
Sir John de Stryvelin, who had summons to the parliament of England as a Baron in 1342 and d.s.p. 1378, bore argent, on a chief Keir is stated, by Nisbet, to have carried as gules three buckles or.
—
supporters two greyhounds, and on a family seal, c. 1700, are two savages wreathed about the middle, holding clubs over their shoulders no registration of arms with supporters exists. Stirling of Ardoch, co. Perth, on a seal, a.d. 1666, has two ;
savages with clubs. Sir George of Glorat, Bart., registered arms, 1672-78, without
FORMAN'S ROLL,
82
supporters but in Stacie's MS. there is a blazon of his arms with " He hath assumed since to support his armes two the date 167 1 heros in armour, bot face and from the knees all naked downward." TouRis OF PiLRiGE. Argent, on a bend azure three crescents or. ;
:
•CORRE OF KeLWODE. Maitlande of Leithingtoune. L. Edmingstoune of that Ilk. L. Hay of Naughtoune. L. Fentoune of that Ilk. L., the bend *Balfoure of Denmylle. durhame of grange. l.
is
invecked
or.
*Durhame of Pitcarrow. *Philpe of Ormestoun.
This surname makes
appearance in Fife Stevin, burgess of Edinits
about the middle of the fifteenth century. burgh 1467, was bailie of Newburgh 1473, and Sir James was curate
Abdie 1481. John (Philp) was abbot of Lindores 1522-66, sat in parliament, and was a lord of Session in 1564 he granted a charter to his cousin James Philp of Ormiston and Margaret Forrett his spouse. Henry sold Ormiston c. 1630, and left a son, James, who was dead in 1655, when his heirs were his sisters Euphemia, wife of John Crytorin in Newburgh Agnes, wife of Robert Fleming of Woodsyde Margaret, wife of James Colquhoun, merchant burgess of Edinburgh and Mungo Law, son of his sister Janet. Ormiston was recovered by another branch of the family. John Philp, clerk of Newburgh, was grandfather of Mr John of Ormiston, who registered arms, c. 1685 azure, on a chevron between three talbots' heads erased argent two lozenges of the field. John of Ormiston d.s.p. before 1704, and his property passed to his cousin John Gumming, and then to William Watson of Ormiston, and Margaret Forbes, wife of Gharles Ramsay. To the Ormiston family belonged William, who went to Sweden 1624, and having had a certificate of gentle birth and descent from the families of Forrett of Fingask, Wood of Largo, &c., was ennobled 1638, and attained the rank of lieutenant-colonel. Elizabeth Fleming, wife of Archbishop Burnett, was materthe arms ascribed to her in a nally descended from the Philps Funeral Escutcheon seem at first to have been a chevron between three mascles, and to have been altered to a chevron between three talbots' heads couped and charged with as many lozenges. Philp was one of the quarters of the first Gountess of Leven, nde Renton, at
;
—
;
;
;
—
;
for her father's mother.
David Philp
sat in parliament for Gupar 1584; David, the barony of Kippo, in which he was succeeded
M.D.,
acquired by his brother John, burgess of Gupar, who died in 1658. Robert of Kippo was father of David, who had a Grown charter of Over Garnbee 1669, and registered arms, 1672-78 azure, a chevron
—
FORMAN'S
ROLL,
83
He married Jean invecked between three talbots' heads erased or. Scott, and left a son, William of Over Carnbee, who was succeeded by his sister Margaret, wife of John Corstorphine of Nydie. There were Philps of Colden for several generations, of Baltilly, of Castlebeg, of Byrehills, &c. John of Greenlaw in Mid-Lothian, auditor of Exchequer, married Sophia Robertson, of the family, of Ladykirk, and died in 1730 his son, James of Greenlaw, judge of the Court of Admiralty, d.s.p. 1782, leaving three sisters coheirs Barbara; Elizabeth, married John Sivright of Southhouse; and Isobel, married John Wood, of the family of Warriston, and was mother of " John Philp Wood, editor of Douglas's Peerage," and author of the
—
;
"
History of Cramond."
—
Pont gives for the surname of Philp ^gules, on a chevron argent between two mullets or a boar's head and a mullet of the field.
James PKilp of Almericloss,
co.
Forfar, bailie
of
Arbroath, was father of James, who registered arms, 1672-78—azure, a chevron heads couped argent motto — Non dormit qui between three talbots'
''
;
custodit."
His grandson, John, was governor of the Dutch island of St Martin in the West Indies, and is in the Lyon Register styled chief
name
his only child, Susanna, married, in 1741, James Wilson, merchant in Glasgow, and they sold Almericloss. In 1771,
of the
;
James Wilson of Glanderstoun registered arms, quartering and with the motto of that family. *Fraser of Brakie and Kinnell. *Balfour of Kirktoune. *Balfoure of Ballone.
Philp,
I
V.
SUNDERLAND HALL MANUSCRIPT. Lord of Lorne. Macleod, Lord of Lewes. Lord of the Isles.
V.
ADDITIONS TO THE BOOKE AND REGISTER OF ARMES, COMPILED BY
SIR DAVID LINDSAY, LYON KING OF ARMS.
The
Arms of Scotland have not been copied. Lord Claud Hamilton of Paisley. Why do the ducal Royal
three
fleurs-de-lis or,
families of
an escutcheon en surtout azure, being the Royal arms of France? For the
Hamilton and Abercorn bear
in
of Chatelleraut, it is said. That duchy was conferred in, February 1548, on James, Earl of Arran, Regent of Scotland, and confiscated in 1559. The writer in an article in the " Herald and Genealogist," Vol.
Duchy
IV., p. 97, discussed the claim of the Hamiltons to the title of duke in France, and argued that the concession by the Emperor Napoleon
in.
to the present Duke of Hamilton was virtually a In that paper the armorial point was not raised.
new
creation.
The collection called W., and other authorities, give the arms of the Regent and his immediate successors in semi-regal style next to those oi the Royal house, and with a series of shields showing by impalement the family alliances. In none of these is this escutcheon of France shown it is not given in either of the entries in the Lyon Register, by Nisbet, by Sir Robert Douglas, or by Wood. The first appearance of it seems to be on the monument erected in Paisley ;
Abbey, to James, Earl of Abercorn, styled Due de Chatellerault who ,
died in 1789. Chatelleraut gave a surname to a family who bore argent, a lion rampant gules within a bordure sable charged with nine bezants. After being the property of the Armagnac it, then a viscounty, was
duchy in 15 14 for Fran(;:ois de Bourbon-Montpensier, who bore France with a baton gules charged with a crescent argent. On the death of the Constable de Bourbon, Chatelleraut was given by erected into a
Francis
1545
;
I.
to his
own younger son
this prince bore
Charles,
France with a
who
died unmarried in
label argent.
would seem as if in later days the Hamilton claimants to the of title Chatelleraut had assumed the arms of France because that duchy had been for a time held by cadets of the Royal house. It
The
label
male
borne by Lord Claud was dropped after the extinction
Dukes
Arran is quartered. Earl Marischal, William Robert, brother of was Abbot of Deer 1546, and died in 1551, leaving a natural son. Sir Andrew of Forsa, who was created Lord Dingwall, 1583, married Elizabeth Grip heiress of Finstadt in Sweden, where he resided for many years, and d.s.p. in 1597. Sir William Keith of Delney, his heir by nomination, had a in the
line of the
of Hamilton
;
Keith, Lord Dingwall.
barony of Delney 1593, sat in parliament for the and was a member of the Privy Council. His seal, 1594, Marischal,
ratification of the
ADDITIONS TO
90 is
remarkable
rather
first
:
and
engrailed three cross crosslets fitchde and as ;
Keith within a bordure Moray third, a bend between
fourth,
second, Randolph, Earl of
;
mullets
many — a unicorn and an eagle. supporters
crest
;
—a
lion's
(?)
head erased Lindsay, Sir Jerome of Annatland, Lyon King of Arms. Mr Seton's "Law and Practice of Heraldry in Scotland" contains notices of the Lyon Kings of Arms, and the "Lives of the Lindsays" gives particulars as to the members of that family who have filled ;
the
ofiice.
Stewart, Sir William, Lyon King of Arms. Lindsay, Sir David of the Mount, Lyon King of Arms. FoRMAN, Sir Robert, Lyon King of Arms, compiler of
the
"
Roll of
Arms," from which facsimiles are given. There are several seals of Andrew, Archbishop of St Andrews 1502-14, quarterly, first and fourth, a chevron 1501, a camel's head between three fishes second and third, a camel's head erased, collared, and campaned 1518, the chevron and fish impaling the :
;
;
;
coat with a camel's head.
has been said that the fish are for Fisher, but of this there is proof, and it remains uncertain which is the paternal coat ; W. places the camel's head in the first and fourth quarters. This family is remarkable for its close connection with the church the earliest notice of the name I find is in 1398, when Patrick, Abbot of Kelso, with the unanimous consent of the chapter, grants a corrodium to William Forman for his services, &c., that is to say, he was to have a room and provisions for life, the same as were 14 10, Thomas occurs as a witness with the usually given to a monk It
no
;
;
designation esquire; 1428, Adam on an assize at Melrose; 1456, William, Canon of Dunkeld 1474, Elizabeth, Prioress of North ;
Berwick; 1483, James Forman, called Dalrymple 1543, William, Canon of Holyrood, was accused of heresy Adam was the last Prior ;
;
of the Carthusians of Perth. In 1484, after litigation with the Prior of St Andrews, Thomas established his right to lodging and main-
tenance in the abbey for himself, a servant, and two horses, " in all nedefull thinges according for a gentle man." 1466, Nichol Forman was proprietor of Hutton, co. Berwick to the same family belonged Sir John Forman of Dalvene, who acquired Rutherford by marriage with Helen, elder sister and coheir of Richard ;
who
Sir John was dead without issue in 1516 his brother Andrew, Archbishop of St Andrews, being his heir. This prelate was Prothonotary 1494, Prior of Pittenweem
Rutherford of that
Ilk,
died in 1502.
;
Bishop of Moray 1501, Archbishop of St Andrews 1514, Papal He was also Archbishop of Bourges, Legate, Envoy to England, &c. and Commendator of Dunfermline and Dryburgh, and of Cottingham in England not Coldingham, as often stated and died in 1522. It is probable that Mr Robert Forman, Dean of Glasgow 1507, 1498,
—
—
Vicar-general 1508,
who
succeeded the Archbishop as Prior of Pitten-
SIR
DA VID LINDSA Y'S
M.S.
weem, was his relative; he sat in the General Council and in Parliament 1526. The Dean about 1535 held
91
at Perth 1513,
half the lands
of Channelkirk, the holder of the other half being Mr Robert, afterwards Sir Robert Forman, Lyon King of Arms, which seems an inSir Robert, usually designed of Luthrie in dication of relationship.
had been Ross Herald 1540, and had a son, John, Rothesay Herald 1569, who was alive in 1594. In 1589 Elizabeth had a tack Fife,
of half the teind sheaves of Channelkirk. Early in the sixteenth of the name married Moncriefif of that Ilk, Sinclair of century ladies
Longformacus, and Gourlay of Kincraig
;
and
at Craii
and Pittenweem
members of the family occur later, holding official positions. RuTHVEN, Earl of Cowrie. Stewart, Earl of Orkney. Stewart, Earl of Arran. It can only be by mistake that in the fourth several
quarter of the second and third grand quarters the ton coat is or, not gules.
Maxwell, Earl of Morton. Sir David Lindsay of Rathillet, Lyon King Stewart, Duke of Lennox.
of
field
Arms.
of the Hamil-
VI. ILLUMINATED HERALDIC MANUSCRIPT, CALLED .WORKMAN'S. C, A.D.
2
1565-6.
A
A QUARTO
volume in the Lyon Office, which has its date pretty nearly fact that the series of figures of the sovereigns with their the by arms ends with Mary, Queen of Scotland, and her second husband, Henry, Duke of Albany. fixed
The Earl leaf is
of Bothwell's coat comes in its place, but on the opposite a sketch in ink of his altered bearings as Duke of Orkney.
The
compiler's name is unknown, but a memorandum at the beginning states that it belonged to James Workman 1623, Joseph Stacie 1654, and afterwards to Henry Frazer, Ross Herald and painter. painted, but Workman has made various annotations, additions of shields in ink, sometimes with the tinctures marked, but sometimes mere sketches and he, or the subsequent
The
original series
of
arms
is
;
proprietors, have also added some shields in colour, which, from their execution and position on the back of the leaves, are easily to be distinguished from the first collection.
The arms given are those of Gesper, King of Tharse. Melschar, King of Arabe. Balthasar, King of Saba. Julius Cesar, first Empriour. Alexander ye Conquerour. Ectour, Prence of Troy. Dauid, King of Charlis ye Mang. Israeli. Josoue, Duke of Israeli. Judes Machabeus. Athur of Britane. Duke of Savoy. Solara of Piedmont. Duke of Rohan (an addition in ink without the name). Duke of Longavell. Duke of Saxoun. Duke of Mylane. Duke of Rohan (in ink without the name, but in the original series). Godefera, Duke of Bullounze. The Empreour of Rome. Ye Armis of France. King of Ingland. King of Scotland. King of Garnate. King of Gallitie. King of Nauerne. King of Arrogoun. King of Castalze. King of Sicilia (Spain, i.e., Castille and Leon
quarterly, quartering in the second Arragon an addition in ink, no name). ;
and third Sicily impaled with King of Alomaine. King of
King of Tole (Toledo). King of Freisland. Sypre. King of Behame. King of Armony (Norway). King of Sueithland. The King of Ongarie. King of Grifhound. King of Poulane. Ye Duke of Claue. King of Jerusalem. King of Naplis. King of Pole. The King of Cicilla. King of Portingall. King of Ireland. Empriour of Rutland. The Prince of Orange. The preceding are all shields crowned, but without The arms of the Duke of Savoy seem of a later date crest or motto. the shield is surmounted of three helmets with crests, and surrounded by the collar of the order of the Annunciation. Arms of Solara, by the same hand as the preceding bendy of six, checquy or and gules and azure crest issuing from a coronet a demi;
;
dog
collared,
obid."
The
—
—
and holding
in his dexter fore-paw an arrow shield encircled with the collar of an order of
A shield in
ink,
no name,
initial I. V.,
K. B.
—a
;
— " Nil
motto^
knighthood. between three
saltire
WORKMAN'S
96
MS.
mullets in chief and flank, and a boar's head couped in base (? Williamson) impaling a fess cheque and in base a hunting-horn (? Boyd). Home, added in ink, initial G. H., and date 1566, but no name three inescutcheons vert second and third, argent, three first,
—
argent, papingoes vert
;
;
fourth, vert,
a lion rampant argent.
of Scotland with crests and supporters. series of figures of Kings of Scotland with surcoats, and of their consorts wearing skirts, on which their arms are represented. John Baliol, with crown, sceptre, and sword, all broken, torn sur-
Arms
A
and his paternal coat on a split shield. Malcolm Canmore and " Margaret, Robert the Bruce and Isobel of Mar, Robert the Bruce and the Duke of Hullesteris dochter," the arms being those of Holstein (?) " callitt David II. and Joan of England, David's son, who died young ye lord of ye illis," shield blank. Robert II. and Euphemia Ross, Robert II. and Elizabeth Mure, Robert III. and Annabella Drummond, James I. and Jane Beaufort, James II. and Mary of Gueldres, James III. and Margaret of Denmark, James IV. and Margaret of England, James V. and Magdalene of France, James V. and Mary of Lorraine-Guise, Earl of Ross his shield Prince of Scotland, with a shield of Scotland. has— first and fourth, Scotland second, Ross third, Brechin. Mary, Queen of Scotland, and the Dauphin. Queen Mary and Henry Duke of Albany his arms are first and fourth. Stewart, Earl of Lennox, as L., and except that the bordure in the second and third quarters is sable, there is over all in chief a label of three points argent second, Ross The Kings hold a sword in third, the arms of the lordship of Man. the right hand and a sceptre in the left, and the Queens a thistle in the The Princes have a thistle in the right and a sceptre in the left hand. but the right hand. The Dauphin has the sword, sceptre, and surcoat, Duke of Albany has no sceptre, and rests his left hand on the shield of his coat,
;
;
;
;
;
;
arms.
Next come a
Duke
series of thirteen shields
— Rothesay Scotland
with coronets,
viz.
David, Duke of :
with a label of three points. Albany, L. Stewart, Duke of Ross, L. Lindsay, Duke of Montrose, Robert, Duke of Albany, Regent, L. Earls of L., the ribband omitted. Mar, Carrick, Stratherne, Fife, March, Murray, Douglas, and Angus, all of
as L.
Earl of Arran, Hamilton.
The
—
supporters two present crest no coroantelopes, each supporting a banner gules, a cinquefoil argent Hamilton series of the alliances of the family in six shields net. of Ross Gordon ; impaling Randolph, Earl of Murray Leslie, Earl of ;
—
;
A
;
Earl of Morton Lord Livingstone. Three Strathbogie Hamilton and Arran quarterly, with a coronet, impaling Scotland; shields Bethune of Creich Earl of Morton. Hamilton, Earl of Arran. Sir James Hamilltoune of Eweindaill. In ink, three cinquefoils
—
;
Earl Marischal
;
;
;
within the Royal trcssure. Prince of Ilis. Scotland quartering the arms of the Isles.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
97
Duke of Chatelherault.
Hamilton and Arran quarterly; present supporters two antelopes gorged with antique
motto— "Throvch;"
— crowns the shield encircled by the Earle of Angus. Unfinished — crest;
St Michael. a lion first, rampant crowned with an antique crown second, a lion rampant gules debruised of a ribbon fourth, a fess checquy surmounted of a bend third, a chief dancetty three buckles in base a cross embattled sable with couped charged over all in an escutcheon of pretence the paternal coat of Douglas, the heart being crowned ; crest a salamander in flames motto " yamais collar of the order of
;
;
;
;
;
—
—
"
;
—
;
supporters a savage wreathed about the middle, and a stag a compartment of wreathed pales. on standing Erl of Huntlie. L., only three fraises in the fourth quarter; crest a stag's head in profile; motto " Bidand;" supporters two greyhounds
arriere
;
—
—
—
collared gules, the collars charged with three buckles (?). Erl of Argyle. L., no fire at the masthead of the
lymphad in the Campbell coat the alternate gyrons are argent, but the word " or" is added crest a boar's head issuing from the coronet motto " I byd my " tyme supporters two lions gardant gules. Erl of Mortoun. First and fourth as L. second and third, a boar crest argent, on a chief dancetty gules two mullets of the field " in a front of tree motto Lok sikcar ;" supporters two naked passant
—
;
—
;
;
—
;
;
—
;
;
—
—
savages.
—a pelican — her piety gules motto— Salvs per Christ supporters two greyhounds collared gules. — Erl of Atholl. the quarters being reversed order a hand holding a key motto—" Furth fortoun and sup—two naked savages chained together with thy porters The Erl of Murro.
in
L., the bendlet is engrailed " "
;
;
crest
;
in
L.,
fil
;
crest "
;
fetteris
;
fetterlocks at their
ankles, he on the sinister side holding in his attached to his ankle.
Erl of Boithvell.
left
—a
hand the chain which
is
horse proper saddled and bridled " gules in front of a tree Keip traist supporters two lions in the leaf is an corner of the anchor, the emblem of the gules upper office of Admiral of Scotland. On the opposite there are added in ink the ;
L., crest
motto —
"
;
—
:
arms of Hepburn, Duke of Orkney— first, Hepburn; second, Orkney; Liddesdale
third,
;
fourth. Vans. First and fourth, France within a bordure engrailed
Erl of Lennvs.
second and third, Stewart within a bordure gules charged with eight buckles or an escutcheon of pretence, argent, a saltire engrailed between four roses gules. This is perhaps the earliest example of the mistake so often repeated subsequently of engrailing the Lennox saltire. Crest a bull's head sable horned vert, breathing fire; motto :"Avand " Darle supporters^two wolves. An unfinished sketch of later date the shield blank; crest a two-headed dragon spouting fire .passing between the branches of a tree motto " Dat incremetvm Deus sable
;
;
—
—
;
—
—two antelopes ;
Abrahie
" ;
supporters
Erl of
Ros.
First
.
—
collared.
and fourth as Stewart, Earl of Lennox, 2 B
—
L.,
with
WORKMAN'S
98
MS,
a label of three points in chief argent second and third, the coat of the " " Earldom of Ross; crest a wolfs head motto Spem svccessvs alit; supporters a unicorn and a wolf. first and fourth, Scotland later addition Earl of Orkney. debruised of a ribbon sable second and third, Orkney of old as L. a king seated on a throne crowned with an antique crown, holding crest
—
—
—
;
;
—
A
—
;
;
—
a sword in his dexter hand, and having a falcon on his left wrist motto " " Sic fvit est et erit supporters a unicorn collared and a griffin. Duke of Abynne, as Earl of Ross, but with the arms of the Lordship of Man in the third quarter crest a demi-eagle proper beaked and " membered gules motto " Spem svccessvs alit supporters a lion and a bear the shield encircled with the collar of and badge of an order, ? St
—
;
—
;
;
—
;
—
;
;
Michael.
An
Earle of Arrane.
addition
—as
the sinister sup-
L., plate 31,
porter not gorged.
Erl of Merchell.
crest — a stag's head
on a chief gules three "
Argent, motto— Veritas "
;
vincit
pallets or; — two supporters stags.
;
Two Keith shields are imperfectly sketched on the same leaf; the one has the chief charged with three pallets, a fess rompu, and in base a man's heart the other, first and fourth, Keith with a man's heart omitted in the fourth quarter; second and third, a fess. ;
Earle of Gowre.
An
front of the man's raised
hand
ram has a supporters
;
plain collar or.
Erl of Rothes.
—two
—as
L., plate 29, the crown not supporters gorged with coronets
addition
L., crest
—a
griffins.
Erle of Mortoun.
An
head
griffin's
addition
—as
gorged and chained.
Erl of Mar, Lord Erskin. "
L., crest
;
motto
—
L., plate 29,
—a
hand
is ;
in
the "
"
Graip fast;
supporters not
a cutlass
holding motto — le pause plvs; supporters—two the arms within the Erl of Eglintovn. tressure or; — —a lady resting her dexter hand upon an anchorRoyal supporters two wyverns. — a stork's head motto— Non Erl of Mvlntrois. — oblie supporters a falcon belled and a stork. " crest—a demi-swan; motto — Indvre Erl of Cravfvrd. — fvrth supporters two lions sejant gardant gules. ;
"
griffins.
L.,
crest
;
L.,
"
crest
;
"
;
L.,
"
—
;
a
sketch added in ink without the name quarterly, first, a lion rampant ; second, a dexter hand couped fessways holding a cross fitchde ; third, a lymphad without sails, fire at the mast-head, two paddles with the broad end elevated fourth, a fish floating on the surface of water in front of a rock ; crest— a lion's head.
Macdonald.
;
—a unicorn's head motto— Yovr — Yovr supporters two —a hand holding a spiked baton; Earl of Bvchquhan. — — motto Ivge nocht supporters two Earl of Caithness. Name obliterated — azure, a lymphad, Erl of Glenkirn. "
L.,
"
crest
;
rabbits.
;
L., crest
"
"
;
storks.
sails
first,
furled, within
a double tressure or; second and third,
or,
a lion rampant
WORKMAN'S
MS.
99
gules; fourth, azure, a three-masted ship or, the mainsail argent; over all, dividing the quarters, a cross engrailed sable; crest a demi-cock rising
—
"
"
— — supporters two
Comit thy verk to God griffins. Lord Leveston. An addition in ink first and fourth, Livingstone second and third, Callendar in an escutcheon of pretence over all a tree growing out of a mount in base within a bordure charged with eight gules
;
motto
;
—
;
;
— Sije puis." —a Erl of Svitherland. head proper motto— " Bvt — supporters a greyhound collared gules and a horse.
cinquefoils
;
motto
"
L., crest
siccar
stag's
"
;
An
Earle of Hume.
addition in ink
;
—
first
and
a lion an escutch-
fourth,
rampant second, three papingoes third, three inescutcheons eon of pretence over all charged with a saltire (?). Crest a lion's head between two olive (?) branches issuing from an antique crown motto " Rex " supporters two lions. ditat, Dens beat Erl of Mvnteith. First and fourth, Graham second and third, Stewart with a chevronel gules, representing the rafters of a roof; crest " a falcon's head; motto Richt and ressovn;" supporters— two lions ;
—
;
;
—
—
;
—
;
—
gardant. first
—
Sir Thomas Erskine. Sketch added in ink of arms of S. T. A. and fourth, on a chief a crown second and third, a pale charged with ;
within a bordure charged with the Royal tressure. Wilson of Absonner, 1627. Sketch added in ink argent, on a pale between two mullets in chief gules, a sword erect, and in base a
a crescent,
all
—
crescent.
Lord Fleming.
and
chevron between three heads erased gules within the Royal tressure second and third, azure, (?) " six fraises three and three argent; crest— a goat's head; motto Lat First
fourth, or, a
—
;
the deid schaw
"
;
— supporters two stags.
Lord Zester.
First and fourth, sable, three fraises argent second three bars ermine; over all in an escutcheon of pretence, third, gules, a goat's head motto " Spair crest argent, three inescutcheons gules
and
;
— — — supporters two savages or two stags; there has ;
;
qvhan zov hes novgt ;" been an alteration, and it is uncertain which is intended to be the final arrangement on the dexter side the savage is most distinct, and on the ;
sinister the stag.
Four added sketches
in ink of
Ker of Cessford, Ker of Fernihirst,
of Yester, and Livingstone of Callendar. As L., Lord of Callendar; crest a de'misavage wreathed with leaves and with branches behind his shoulders, holding in his dexter hand a club in bend sinister. The spelling of the motto
Hay
—
Lord Levinstovn.
has evidently been a difficulty to the compiler, and he has tried three ways: "Cevs ave plvis;" "Cevs ave plase;" "Seys a pais." Supporters two naked savages holding clubs over their shoulders, and on each side of the shield two serpents entwined and erect. Lord Hvme. L., crest— a lion's head erased with branches behind and on either side; mottoes ''A la fine attendes ;". "Avyeslafiuef'
—
— supporters two
—
lions.
WORKMAN'S —a serpent
loo
Lord Setoun.
crest
L.,
MS, spouting out
from his
fire
" with branches behind him motto— Hazard mouth and fordvart," hand supporters — two mertrixes collared a word added the tail
zit
;
in
first
later
;
with four plates to each collar is attached a gules, the collars charged strap or ribbon ending in a ring, which rests on the ground in front of the hind feet. Lord Lindsay (of the Byres). L., crest a swan rising from the " " " le ante and " I leif bvt drid head of a griffin mottoes supporters ;
—
;
—two griffins. Lord Innemrath. blotted out,
—
;
garb in the first and fourth quarters is second and third has fire at the mast" a unicorn's head; motto Qvhadder vil ze;" supL., the
and the lymphad
head only; crest
—
—two does. porters
Lord Drvmond.
in the
Or, three bars
—
wavy gules;
crest
—a
dog's head,
which is added in ink a crown, resembling an antique crown, from which the head issues a note above says, " Creast is a dog passant now;" motto "Gang warly;" supporters two naked savages on a grassy compartment semde of caltraps. Lord Borthvik. L., crest a moor's head proper banded argent and two angels. The sable, the band having long floating ends supporters dexter supporter seems to be intended for a female, and has a short tunic of a grey colour, tight at the waist, bare arms and legs, red petticoat reaching to the knee the sinister supporter is male, tunic loose, and it and Motto " Qvy condy." the skirt both red, arms vested sable, legs bare. Six unfinished ink sketches of the arms of Egypt, Turkey, Prester to
—
—
;
—
—
;
—
;
John, Persia, Morocco, Tartary, a later addition. Lord Boyd. L., crest a dexter hand with thumb and two fingers " Two fingers is pointing upwards, the others folded down a note added, Behind the crest are several branches placed so as to resemble cut off."
—
;
—
Motto
—
"
"
supporters two squirrels. Lord Methven. L., the Stewart quarter has a label of three points gules in chief the lion in the escutcheon of pretence is argent crest a. square tower placed with one of the angles in the centre, conical roof, with " a flagstaff and flag flying on the summit motto " Pas fordvard supporters a wyvern and a greyhound collared gules.
a
fan.
Confedo',
;
;
—
—each quarter
Lord Sinclar.
Quarterly
two masts and white engrailed
sable
—
;
sails
crest
—a
;
;
griffins.
L.,
;
lymphad or with
in an escutcheon over all, argent, a cross " demi-cock displayed motto " Faight
— supporters two —an Lord Gray. —two gardant proper. ;
azure, a
—
crest
anchor;
motto
—
— "Fast;"
;
supporters
lions
The
Andrew Gray
of Broxmouth, 1424, gives a lion rampant crowned, with a swan's head and neck issuing from a coronet for crest. That of his son, Andrew Lord Gray, 1449, has a lion rampant within a seal of
bordure engrailed, being the coat ever since borne by the family. Two years later his seal has the crest used by his father, and for supporters
two
lions gardant.
An
illuminated
MS.
of the early part of the reign of
James
VL
WORKMAN'S
MS.
loi
shows a curious variation ; the crest is a lady's head with long flowing hair and a straggling wreath, the whole being rather suggestive of the of appearance Ophelia after the loss of her reason. The supporters are and the motto is " Anchor fast," the first word being represented by the figure of an anchor. Esplin, 162 1, gives what have latterly been the crest, motto, and supporters of this noble family, viz., an anchor, "Anchor fast, anchor," and two lions gardant gules.
two wild
cats,
Lord Olyphant.
it
2. unicorn's head with foliage behind tovt povoire; "^supporters two elephants. crest z. L., (of Sanquhar). wyvern spouting
"
;
—
L., crest
motto— A tovt povoyre a
Lord Creichtovn
—
—
—
which protrudes a barbed tongue motto " God send grace supporters two lions. Lord Drifven. L., crest a ram's head; motto " Deid schav;" supporters a ram and a goat. Lord Okiltre, as Lord Avyndale. L., a label of three points gules in chief in the Stewart quarter; crest—a white dog(?) statant spotted sable; " " motto Forvard supporters— two wyverns spouting fire. Lord Ogilby. L., the lion is rampant; crest a (dove ?) bird of a yellow green colour, bill open and slightly curved; moVto—'' ffynes ;" supporters two slate-coloured bulls collared with red ropes or torses, he on the dexter gardant. The crest on the family seals, from a.d. 1440 to that of James, first Lord Ogilvy of Airiie, 1506, is a lady's head. An illuminated MS. later in date than the one now quoted from, gives a bull's head with a torse round the neck. The MS. called King's and Nobility's Arms has a bird flame, in the centre of
"
;
—
;
—
—
—
—
—
;
A
—
like
a crow.
Lord Elfinstovn.
L., the boars'
—two swords, one
heads couped
;
crest (has evidently
been altered) erect, the other in bend sinister, are partially visible over them is drawn in ink the figure of a lady from below the middle, issuing from rocks or waves (?), holding in her left hand, which is motto " Cavs cavsit ;" supporters two savages raised, a branch wreathed about the head and middle with foliage. Lord Ros. First and fourth, or, a chevron checquy sable and second and third, argent between three water bougets of the second gules, three crescents argent within a bordure of the second, charged with " crest a fox courant motto " Thynk on eight roses of the field supporters two falcons. The crest was soon after changed to a falcon's ;
—
;
—
;
—
—
;
head.
Lord Maxvel.
;
—a
;
stag couchant before a holly bush — "I byd ye fairvardla;" supporters — two proper Lord Sempil. the or and the horns are stringed sable; —a — head motto — Keip supporters two greyL.,
crest
;
motto
stags
"
hounds
stag's collared gules.
Lord Somervel.
attired azure.
field is
L.,
crest
—
traist ;"
;
the cross crosslets seven in number, and " Feir God in Ive;" supargent; crest wyvern on a wheel motto two brown dogs, with long hair and large -ears, collared gules. porters
—
—a
L.,
;
2 c
—
WORKMAN'S
I02
A
MS.
—
a few years later in date gives for supporters two frogs crest a ostrich feathers. frog sitting in front of three Lord Saltovn. L., crest a Cornish chough; motto '' Psalvs per
MS.
;
—
—
Christvm:" supporters— two falcons. A little later the crest is a demifalcon rising, and was altered to a parrot feeding on a bunch of cherries before 1624.
Lord Forbes.
L., crest
— supporters a
—a
stag's
head
motto
;
A
— " Grace me gyd
;"
MS. not many years lion gules and a naked savage. later gives two bears argent muzzled sable as supporters, and for crest a bear's head as in the arms. Esplin in 1621 calls the supporters two bloodhounds argent collared gules.
Lord Glammes. which issue
trefoils;
L.,
crest
—a
motto— "In
lady's face within a chaplet,
from
MS. soon
after
dne speraviy
te
A
— supporters a
gives for crest a castle within a chaplet;
unicorn and a
lion.
*LoRD Denistoun. a later edition. Lord Heres. First and fourth, Maxwell, points gules
a label of three crest second and third, Herries stag's head erased " " Dominvs dedit ; supporters a savage and a hedgehog. puts Herries in the first and fourth quarters crest a stag's motto " Dvrvfn patientia frango ;" supporters a hedge-
— ;
—a
—
;
gules motto Another MS. head proper; hog and a stag. Lord Lindores. ;
in chief
—
—
—
;
—
Created in 1600. An addition, name not given Leslie quartering Abernethy, on an escutcheon of pretence a castle crest " Stat promissa fides T supporters— two griffins. a demi-angel motto Lord of Lowdon. Created 1601. Added in ink ^gyronny of eight " " I byde my tyme supgules and ermine crest a phoenix motto
—
—
;
;
—
— two stags. porters ;
Lord Cathkart.
proper holding a crescent gules
two
;
L., crest
—a
;
—
—
;
dexter hand between two branches
motto
—"
hoip to speid ;" supporters
I
—
parrots.
Lord Cairleill.
First
and
over third, or, a cross gules two dragons' saltire azure ; crest
—
all
;
— supporters two peacocks proper.
second and fourth, gules, a cross or in an escutcheon of pretence, argent, a " ;
heads addossde
;
motto
—
Hvniilitate ,"
Another MS. gives a demi-peacock for crest. The cross flory gules in a field argent given by Sir David Lindsay, seems thus for a time to be disused; but in Esplin's MS., 1621, there is gules, a cross flory or, for Carlyle quartering or, a cross gules, for Corsbie. ;
Lord Cammel of Glenarfet.
An
addition
—
first
and
fourth,
third, Campbell, gyronny of eight sable and argent second, Lome Stewart crest a castle tripled towered gules, the side towers have conical roofs, from that in the centre issues a doe's head ; supporters ;
—
;
;
—
two does.
Lord Lovat.
fourth, argent, three antique crowns gules a stag's head between crest third, azure, three fraises argent
First
and
—
;
second and two axes bendways, blades turned outwards, foliage resembling holly ;
WORKMAN'S MS. motto— "I am redde;" supporters — two
on long stalks;
leaves
103 stags
sejant in front of trees.
*Wrquhard of that
An
Ilk.
addition.
This name has been very
Seal, in 1505, of Alexander, sherifffrequently mistaken for Wishart. depute of Elgin, has a boar's head couped in chief, and two keys, wards Porteus gives for Urquhart of Cromarty or, three outwards, in base.
Urquhart of Badyar—
and for pale, and a boar's head
boars' heads erased gules
;
—
^gules,
on a
fess
or between two keys in erased, three stars sable. the representer of which family, Badyar evidently stands for Burdsyards, Duncan of Burdsyards, Captain of Foot, registered in 1766 or on a fess azure between three boars' heads erased gules, two keys in saltire of the
—
field.
Adam
Urquhart of Meldrum,
as heir of the
Meldrums of
co.
that
Aberdeen, registered arms, 1672-78, Ilk, and Seton of Meldrum, bore
Meldrum and Seton quarterly, thus dropping his paternal coat entirely, but taking for crest the boar's head erased or. In 1741, William of Meldrum, having become heir male of Cromarty, recorded the simple coat or, three boars' heads erased gules langued azure, was allowed two grey-
—
hounds proper, collared gules and leashed or, as supporters ; and to indicate his representation of the Meldrum and Seton families, took for crest a demi-otter sable, crowned with an antique crown or, holding a crescent gules between his paws. Sir
Thomas Urquhart,
in his extraordinary genealogy of his family, meant as a step back to Adam, which is
has traced them step by probably satire on extravagant claims to antiquity. Gylleroch de Urchard witnessed an agreement, in 1233, between Andrew, Bishop of Moray, and Sir Alan the Usher, as to the churchlands of Urchard. The Urquharts were hereditary sheriffs of Cromarty, at any rate, from the time of Adam de Urchard, sheriff in the reign of David II. he was son of William de Urchard, and direct ancestor of Sir Thomas, who sold the barony of Cromarty, but it was repurchased by Sir John, who became heir male. His son Jonathan again sold it in 1684, and about the middle of last century the estate was for a time again recovered by a descendant ;
of
ancient possessors. The tutor of Cromarty sat in parliament 1600- 1608, and Adam Urquhart of Meldrum represented Aberdeenshire 1665-78. Arms of Sir Adrian de Damman of Flanders, knighted 2nd May 1602. Arms of Lord Colville of Culross. An addition in ink, rough and unfinished. its
*L0RD OF Lvis. *LoRD Makgregour.
1
50 1
—
first
Seal of Patrick Macgregor of Ardenconnel and fourth, a bull's head couped second and third, two clubs ;
raguly in saltire.
John Murray of Lanrick was recognised as chief of the clan, and created a baronet in 1795 as Sir John Macgregor, alias Murray of Lanrick and Balquhidder, registered arms the same year, the crown rest-
WORKMAN'S
I04
MS.
ing on the point of the sword which is hilted and pommelled or there is a second motto below the shield, ''Ard challick" In 1801 the motto ;
"
and Ard choille." He is called " Baronage," representative of the family, but Sir Robert Douglas, in his makes Duncan Murray or Macgregor representer of Sir John's branch, and other families contested its claim. See Skene's " Highlanders of
was changed
to
Srioghal
ma dhream"
''
Scotland."
*LORD OF LORNE. The armis of O'Neill of Irland, an Lord of Sanctt Johnne.
MakCloyd
addition.
of y^ Ilk.
*L0RD OF YE IlLIS. Robert Lord Melville.
A
having been created in 1616. First and fourth, Melville of that Ilk second and crest a crescent argent motto third, Melville of Raith, both as L. " " coehim an and a ratch-hound. ; Denique supporters eagle Lord of Halybvrtovn. As L,, Lord of Dyrltoun. Crest a moor's " head banded between two branches motto " Wache weill supporters —two moors with bands argent and sable round their heads and waists. Rutherfourd of y^ Ilke, now of Edgerstoun. L. Hereis, Lord of Terriglis. L. Lord Ross of Halkatt. L. Carlyle, Lord Carlyll. L. Creichtoun, Lord Creichtoun. L. later addition, the title
—
;
;
Monypeny, Lord Monypenny. L. *Angus of ye Auld. The Lord of ye Ile of Man. L. Lord Bissart of Bewfort. L. Carlyle, Lord Carlyll. L., 63. Ye Lord of Lorne of Auld. L. Lord Gordoun. L. Lord Gyffert of Auld. L. BoYis of Dryvisdaill of Auld. L. Lord of Nyddisdaill of Auld. "
Edgar's
—
;
L.,
coatte."
—
—
—
Seres, Lord of Dwnde of Auld. L. Lord Chissam of Auld. L. Douglas, Lord of Niddisdaill. L. CoLUYLL, Lord of Ouchiltrie. L. Erskyn, Lord of Breching. L. ORWELL, Lord of Lawderdale. L. Lord Sowlis of Liddisdale. L. The Lord of Galloway of Auld. L. The Lord of Garreoch of Auld. L. Ye Lord of Annanderdale. L. SiNCLARE, Lord Synclare. L. Ffraseir, Lord Fraseir. L.
M
;
;
added
on
the
margin.
WORKMAN'S Ffraseir, Lord of Lowate. L. Wauss, Lord of Dyrltoun of Auld.
Lord Durward of Auld. L, Lord Landellis of Auld. L. Lord Lyle. L., crest a cock proper
—
—two wild porters
;
MS.
^"^X^^
.
K *^ L.
105
"
c '^i/?'
'5
iw""*""
motto
—" An
"
I
may
;
sup-
cats gardant.
Arms of the Company of Painters. The coats which follow till Lowis are all additions, and uncoloured. Sir John Ramsay, Knight, of the Eist Barnes. Parted per pale, on the dexter an arm issuing from the dexter side of the shield, the hand holding a sword erect piercing a heart, and supporting on the point the crown of Scotland on the sinister, an eagle displayed with two heads charged on the breast with a crescent helmet, mantling, and wreath, but no crest; motto Hcec dextra vindex principis et Patrice;" supa unicorn and a stag, both collared. porters Sir Hew Hereis, Knight, of Cousland. First and fourth, an arm issuing from the exterior side of the shield, the hand holding a sword erect supporting on its point the crown of Scotland second and third, a a hedgehog thistle slipped and leaved between three hedgehogs crest " " motto Ferendo et feriendo; supporters a lion and a savage wreathed ;
—
—
;
''
—
;
—
—
;
;
about the middle. Sir Rot. Grahme of Scotstoun, Knicht. First and fourth, two bars wavy, on a chief three escallops second and third, three roses crest a stork's head; supporters two falcons, only the one on the sinister being drawn. S^- Andrew Ker of Hietoun, Knycht. A chevron charged with three " Fordward in the name of mullets, in base a stag's head erased motto—
—
God
—two savages.
"
;
;
—
;
supporters
;
Patrick Barclay of Towye, Knycht. Azure, a chevron or between three crosses patde (?) argent; motto "Honor est amor;" supporters two hounds collared. This gentleman's descent has S^- Thomas Ker of Hirth, Knycht. not been ascertained perhaps the chief added to the arms may be allusive to his possession of St Kilda or Hirta, of which he had a Crown charter yth March 1610—a chevron charged with three mullets, in base a unicorn's head erased a chief parted per pale, on the dexter side a crescent, and on the sinister a three-masted vessel with sails furled floating on the sea " motto " The Lord direct my wayes supporters two savages. S^ George Dowglas of Ridhouse, Knycht. A chief charged with two mullets, in base a lion's head erased, and in the honour point a crescent, probably as a mark of cadency supporters two griffins, only the one on the sinister side being drawn. A lion rampant and S^- James Crichtoun of Ruthvine, Knycht. gR.
—
—
;
;
—
—
;
;
—
;
a chief charged with three mascles. Sir Claud Hamilton. Hamilton and Arran quarterly, over all an escutcheon of pretence charged with two (?) obliterated crest a threemasted ship with sails furled motto " portam." ;
—
2D
;
Ad
—
WORKMAN'S
io6
MS.
Or, a lion passant gardant gules, on his breast with a mullet the lion is placed on a terrace of an inescutcheon charged " Fideliter." three platforms or steps; motto Sir Colyn Cambell of Ardkindles, Knycht. Gyronny of eight, motto " Set on." in the centre a mullet fess checquy between three Sir Alex. Hamilton (Innerwick). cinquefoils, in honour point a round buckle. Sir James Elphiston of Knycht. On a chevron boars' heads a erased round buckle ; motto " Cause between three
Sir John Ogilvy.
—
;
—
;
A
—
,
causit."
Sir James Crychton. First and fourth, a lion rampant; second and third, a saltire and chief; motto " Immobiliter" Sir Mark Ker. A chevron charged with three mullets, in base a unicorn's head erased, in chief a label of three points motto " God in
—
—
;
a
gud
cause."
Hary Lindesay of Carristoun,
First and fourth, a Knycht. lion rampant; second and third, a fess checquy; in an escutcheon of pretence, a fess within the Royal tressure, being Charteris of Kinfauns. S^- Neill Mtgumry of Langschaw, Knycht. An annulet gemmed with three stones between three fleurs-de-lis, all within the Royal tressure; " motto " Garde bien ; supporters two wyverns. Sir David Murray. A crescent, with a cross patde between the horns, between three mullets, all within the Royal tressure supporters two ladies, only she on the sinister side being drawn. Sir Robert Hamilton. crescent with a mullet above it between " three cinquefoils motto Fear God." Preston of Craigmiler. Argent, three unicorns' heads couped " sable armed or crest a unicorn's head erased motto Pour dien /aire ;" " Lord supporters two lions. There is added below, in a later hand, a the crest in Dingwall, prince's croune." Braug of Mooresk (? Aquhorsk), the last word almost illegible, and the whole entry in a different hand. Two barrulets between two towers in chief, and three crescents, two and one in base a crescent. crest member of this little-known family Colonel Sir William Brag, Broge, or Broig made some figure in the service of the States General early in the seventeenth century. His arms, as given in Font's MS. 1624, have three barrulets crest a hand holding a sword motto " Honneur ou mort /' supporters on the dexter a man in armour, and on the sinister a horse saddled and bridled. His daughter and heiress, Mary, wife of Captain John Menteith, a younger son of the Randiford family, having left no surS^-
—
—
—
;
—
;
—
A
—
—
;
;
—
—
;
—
;
—
A
—
—
;
viving issue, his fortune was inherited in 1636 by his niece, Janet Broig, wife of David Menteith, an officer in Broig's regiment, younger son of Menteith of Lochend. Arms registered, 1672-78, by Charles Bragge of triple
"
—
sable, two barrulets engrailed between as many towers, towered in chief argent and three crescents in base or motto
Netherauquhask
—
;
Fidelis et constans."
Sir William Levingtoun of Culter, Knycht. First and fourth, second and third, Callendar on an escutcheon of pre-
three gillyflowers
;
;
WORKMAN'S tence a moor's head couped, in chief over
— porters two savages
motto —
all
MS.
107
a label of three points
sup-
;
''
Si Dieu piaist." A stag's head Sir James Ballenden of Bruchton, Knycht. erased between three cross crosslets fitchde motto "Sic itur ad astra" supporters two ladies. Sir John Ramsay of Dahousie, Knycht. An eagle displayed with heads two supporters two stags. Sir Andro Melvill of Garvok, Knycht. An eagle displayed between three crescents. Sir (David ?) Wod of Craig, Knycht. Much tampered with the the name in full christian name has been written over something else " and the motto, Prowyde," are added below the shield, all in the same Parted per bend sinister azure and hand, evidently of a later date. a with a tree eradicated vert hunting-horn sable hanging from the argent, lower branches supporters two savages wreathed round the middle. Sir James Sempill of Bei-treis, Knycht. A chevron checquy between two hunting-horns stringed in chief and a gillyflower in base. This is the son and heir of the marriage contracted in 1564 between " of Robert Lord Sempill, John Sempill, called the dancer," younger son " " and Mary Livingstone, known as the lusty one of the Queen's Maries, on which John Knox reflects so severely. The Queen provided for the young couple, who thus founded the Beltreis family, several members of which were authors of poems, satires, and songs. Sir James, knighted in or about 1600, was Envoy to England towards " the close of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and author of The Packman's Pater Noster, a Pick-Tooth for the Pope ;" the gillyflower in base was to commemorate his mother, the foundress of the fortunes of this line and ;
—
—
;
—
;
;
;
—
;
;
in 1672, when his grandson, Francis Sempill of Beltreis, registered arms, the third hunting-horn of the paternal coat was resumed in base and three
hand holding a pistol; motto male line about 1809. Sir James Scot, of Fausyd, Knicht. A pheon point upwards between three lions' heads erased. Sir John Hume of North Berwick, Knycht. As Lord Hume, L. supporters two lions. Sir John Grahame of Natheines, Knycht. As Earl of Montrose, gillyflowers placed in chief, the crest being a " In loyaltie." The family expired in the
—
—
;
with a label of three points in the centre; supporters collared and a falcon. L.,
—a
hound
Sir Robert Deniston of Montjoye, Knycht. A bend between a unicorn's head erased and a cross crosslet fitchde. He was Conservator of Scots Privileges, and seems to have been connected with Fifeshire Christian Gibson, his widow, married secondly (James ?) Shoner or Schoneir, and died in 1642 she was mother of Mr James Shoner of Caski;
;
the parish of Kinglassie, who married Anna, daughter of berryan, Robert Forbes of Rires, and had fourteen children. The son and heir, Robert Shoner of Caskiberryan, married in 1659 Margaret, daughter of in
Robert Brown of Finmount, and had issue
;
he sold the estate about
WORKMAN'S
io8
MS.
peculiar name seems to have disappeared. of wife James Pringle of Whytbank, is stated to have Sophia Schooner, been a Danish lady and maid of honour to Queen Anne, consort of James No arms have been discovered as borne by this name in Scotland. VI. On the next page is inscribed " These be ye four knychtes of Walter,
and
1680,
this
somewhat
Erie of Balcleugh
":
—
Walter Lord Scott of Buccleuch, was cleuch
1
created Earl of Buc-
6th March 16 19.
Sir Walter Scot of Gowdelands, Knight. Sir Rot. Scott of Heining, Knight. Both shields blank. Sir Jhone Scot of Newbrough, Knight. On a bend between an arrow bendways point upwards in chief, and a lion's head erased in base, a star of six points wavy pierced between two crescents crest a stag's " Pacem amo." head motto Sir Adam Gordone of Park, Knight. Three boars' heads couped, a crescent argent in the centre a crescent charged with a crescent crest
—
;
;
charged with a crescent sable. S^ Bruce of Airth, Knt. mullet on
—
;
A
saltire
—
and a chief
with a
—a horse's head bridled charged motto— the dexter side — doutt nolt;" supporters two savages wreathed about ;
crest
;
and head and middle. Sir ( Drummond). Three bars wavy, in chief a mullet '' Uiuit post funera wiriius;" supporters a dog's head; motto Weill
—
—
"
Do the
crest
—two
;
savages wreathed about the middle.
Sir Georg Campbell of Coobath
added in another hand, but this is a mistake. Gyronny of eight gules (?) and ermine crest an eagle displayed supporters two stags. Sir Jhon Maxweill of Pook, Knight. Argent, on a saltire sable stoned crest a. stag's head surrounded by holly branches annulet an " I am motto readye ;" supporters two apes, that on the sinister side The four coats just described are twice drawn. collared. At the top of the next page is written " Anno dnj 1602 wer creat thir Knychts," seven in number: Sir Jhon Hamilton of Kinclewye, Knyt. Hamilton and Arran
—
;
—
—
Glenorche
is
—
;
;
(?).
—
;
—
quarterly.
Andro Leslye of Lumbenye,
Leslie quartering a lion " Qui cadif' rampant, over all a label of three points in chief; motto
Sir
Knyt.
—
(illegible.)
Sir Adrian Damman of Bysterwelt, Knycht. Shield blank. Sir Robert Hackheid of Pitfirine, Knyt. Arms represented as a chief dancetty, charged with a lion passant.
Sir Archibald Murray of Darnhall, Knycht. As F. Blackbarony. Sir John Schaw of (illegible), Knight. A spear erect between three covered caps.
(Name
illegible)
A lion rampant quartering three cross an indication of a chevron between them. of Litilden, Knyt. Shield blank.
crosslets fitchde, with
Sir
Mark Ker
Kennedy.
WORKMAN'S Hume
Sir George Sir Robert
Ker
MS.
109
of Broxmouth, Knycht. Shield blank. of Ankram, Knycht. A chevron charged with
three mullets, in dexter chief a crescent.
Sir Patrick Hume of Ayto, Knyt. Shield blank. Sir George Mushet of Burnbank, Knycht. Shield blank. S'*- W*^- Drummond of Rickarton, Knycht. Shield blank. S"^- Jhone Drumond of Borland, Knycht. Shield blank. S'^- Alex^- Setoune of Tul, Knycht. Shield blank. S^- Georg Touris of Garntoune, Knycht. Shield blank. S^- Georg Preston of Craigmiller, Knycht. Shield blank. S^- James Dundas of Craigtoun, Knyt. Shield blank. S^- Robert Hamilton of Esterlieys, Knyght. Shield blank.
Arms of Great Britain within a garter. Sir George Hamilton of Greinla, Knyght.
Hamilton with a
label of four points in chief.
—
The xxv day
of Apryle 1604 were creat these honorable Lords Lord Lord Lord Elfinston of Abercorn, James James Hamiltoun, Bamerinoch, Lord Colvill, Lord of Culross, John Murray, Lord Tullibardin.
"
Sir Jhon Murray of Philiphaugh, Knyght. L. Sir John Bruce of Kencavill. As L., Clackmannan; motto
—
Balnevi."
Sir Robert Colvill of Debentries Sir Robert Foster of Strahenrie.
(?)
As
L. L. 85, the horns stringed
gules.
on which are the four preceding shields is marked " Lord " below is added in ink in a different hand Colvill's Knyghts Levistoun of Denipes. Livingstone of Wemyss as L., quartering
The
leaf
—
;
azure, a lion rampant, or a lion
The
next leaf
rampant azure. contains four shields, and is marked
"
"
New
Knychts,"
Lord Abercorn's Knychts." Sir Robert Dalzell of that Ilk, K. L. Sir Alex^- Drummond of Medop, Knycht. Drummond without any mark of cadency. Sir Georg Hamilton of Grenla. Hamilton without any mark of cadency.
Sir Jhon Henderson of Fordal, Knycht. L., three piles only, and issuing from the dexter side of the shield. Below is a note " Ther nobill men wer creat in Hawroudhous the xxv day of Apryle befor ther nobill men, the chancelor for the tyme tein vis generall, videlicet, the Lord Abercorne, Lord Balmerinoch, Lord Tillibardine, Lord Coluill of Culross." Jon Graham of Grogar, Knycht. A cross crosslet fitchde issuing from a crescent, on a chief three escallops, all within the Royal tressure. Sir Dawid Heryng of Lethendie, Knycht. L., a rose before the upper lion. Sir Wm. Graham of Claypote; Knyt. A chief charged with three escallops, and issuing therefrom three piles, in base a .rose, all within the :
2
E
1
1
WORKMA N'S
o
—
MS.
"
Non crescunt rosce absqtie spinis ;''' supporters Royal tressure motto two stags. Sir Robert Grahame of Morphie, Knycht. A chevron between three escallops, on the chevron a mullet. Sir Wilzeam Graham of Balargus, Knyt. As Claypote, no motto
—
;
or supporters.
—
Note. The first day of May anno 1604 yeir, being tuysday at even, the chancelor being Wice de Rege for the tyme, knychtit thir nobillmen, Sir Dawid Hering of videlicet, Sir Jhon Graham of Grogre, Knyt Lethendye, Knyt; Sir William Graham of Claypote, Sir Robert Graham of Morphie, Knychts. Sir David Murray of Gosferd, Knyt, Lord of Scone, barroun cross patde and barrouneatt, and of our soverane lords parliament. in each fess between three hearts, between two crescents charged with a Crest a stag at gaze in front of mullet, all within the Royal tressure. " " Meliora motto two trees supporters a savage wreathed spero ; about the head and middle, and a lion. At Perth the sevint day of July 1604, in presence of Vice de Roy and the rest of the nobilitye, videlicet, ;
A
—
—
;
—
Mortoun, Mershell, Lithcow, Hoyme, Flemyng, Drumond, mony other nobilmen and barouns, wes Sir Dauid Murray creat Lord, Sir Dauid Murray Knyt, of Gosfurd, Lord of Scone, barroune and barrouneet, of our soverane lords parliament, and after being creat requestit for his twa knyts, qulk wer receauid efter the formes of Knytheid, S' Andro Balfour of Balemouth, S' Jhon Moncreif. Sir Andro Balfour of Balethmouth, Knycht. A chevron charged with an otter's head erased, in base a mullet crest an otter's (?) head motto " Frward, nee temere, nee timide ;'^ supporters two ladies. Sir Jhon Moncreif of Kilmouth, Knycht. A lion rampant and a " Viresco vulnere ;" supa pelican's head; motto chief ermine; crest two lions. porters a crest (Cranstoun). Arms without the name. Three cranes " motto Thovs vant, or I vant ;" supporters a lady and a crane's head
Angus, Sutherland,
Arroll,
Lauderdale, w'
—
—
;
—
—
;
—
—
;
—
—
;
—
stag.
be remarked on these added coats that they exhibit, in many instances, as Herries, Ramsay, and Lord Scone, a wide departure from the simple character of older Scottish heraldry not only have coats of augmentation come into fashion, but it seems to be thought that every knight almost is to carry supporters. The next part of this collection consists of the arms of the minor barons and gentry six shields on a page, coloured, without crest or motto in the original MS., but there are numerous additions. The paging is given, and it will be understood that when there are six shields on a page they are of the oldest date, when there are fewer they may probably be more modern. It
may
;
;
Lowis OF Menar. Irwin of ye Drum. Banais of Hawhill. I.
L., argent, three laurel leaves vert.
L.
L.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
1 1 1
•ACHMOWTE OF YT IlK. Balfour of yt Ilk. F. Innes of yt Ilk. gules and the heads or. 2.
Arms
this coat
is,
Pentland,
" ;
of yt Ilk"
added
Gideon Murray,
is
who was Ross
in a later hand.
The
history of
first
—
She and her sisters Sarah, wife of Lorimer, and who married James Wauchope in Templehouse, without issue,
daughter." Isabella,
is
field
of Elibank, married Margaret an annotator of Scotstarvit describes as " a miller's
that Sir
whom
and fourth quarters the
ink of Joseph Stacie, an Englishman
in
Herald 1663-87.
*Pentland
L., in the first
—possessed part from Pentland.
of the temple-lands of Crichton, co. Edinburgh, not far is not unknown at an early period, for we find
The name
in 1392 Sir John de Pentland, chaplain of St Giles' Church, Edinburgh, and in 1438 Laurence Pentland, prior of the Carmelites at Tullylum, near
Sir Perth, but there never was any family of Pentland of that Ilk. Gideon Murray had a gift, in 1596, of the Provostry of Crichton for life. The arms of Pentland make their appearance as a quarter in the funeral
escutcheons of the descendants of Margaret, with the occasional variation The that the fess is altered to a bend, and the crescents to cinquefoils. coat
was granted
in 181
1
to
George Pentland, who
is
"
styled
of that Ilk,"
although at that time, and long before, the estate of Pentland belonged to the family of Gibson. There are traces of persons of the name of Pentland, resident at Crichton, early in last century, and in 1573 Captain John Pentland was banished for the slaughter of Ninian Liddell of Halkerstoune, whose property was adjacent to Crichton. As L., Erskine, Lord of Brechin, the pale 3. Erskin of Dun. a with cross crosslet fitchde. being charged
*Makcalla.
*Umfrastoun of yt
Ilk.
Scott of Balvere. L. *Dasoun. Inglis of Lochend. L. * Rogers' Arms. 4. Forbes of Pitsligo. In ink unfinished
—on a chevron or
between
three bears' heads couped as many acorns. 5. Uanse of yt Ilk. Apparently argent, a bend gules charged in a chief with mullet; this coat has been partially painted over, making,the bend azure charged with a mullet or in the fess point.
Bissett of yt Ilk. L., argent, a bend gules. *BoEG OF YT Ilk. (Boog or Boge.) Rynd of ye Carse. L., or on a bend sable three escallops argent, in chief a mill-rind of the second. This name is in Lyndsay's MS., and Alexander Rind, the representative elsewhere, by mistake written Reid. of the family about 1672, being then Procureur dX Amsterdam, registered the arms as given by Sir David Lyndsay, and which appear on the seal of James Riende, 1478. The family was one of antiquity in Forfarshire,
1 1
WORKMA N 'S
2
MS.
and received charters from Robert I. and David II. they figure in feuds with the Ogilvies, Guthries, and other neighbours. SiTSARF OF YT Ilk. The lands from which this family took its name lie in the barony of North Berwick, and remained in their hands Cadets possessed Quarrelsyde, at the end of the seventeenth century. and Ruchlaw, co. Collegehead, which passed to an heiress about 1715, ;
Haddington, at least as early as the beginning of the seventeenth century. Their lands were erected into a barony by Crown charter, 24th August 1700, and were inherited by Martha, wife of Francis Buchan, who assumed the surname and arms of Sydserff. An entail was executed in 1 77 1, and the estate now belongs to Thomas Buchan Sydserff of Ruchlaw. Archibald, a merchant in Edinburgh, sat in parliament during the Civil War, suffered losses and imprisonment, and was knighted in
December
1660.
Sydserff, Dean of Edinburgh, was consecrated Bishop Brechin 1634, and translated to Galloway the following year; at the Restoration he was the only surviving Scottish bishop, and died in 1663,
Thomas
of
leaving a large family, of whom Sir Thomas fought under Montrose. Several of the younger branches of this family bore three fleurs-delis,
with appropriate differences.
Lord of Gartaly Stewart.
only two mullets in chief. lion rampant charged on 6. Two coats in ink without names. A chevron within a bordure a crescent the shoulder with engrailed. charged with a crescent between two acorns. P.,
A
*GuiLD of that Ilk. FoRMANE of YT Ilk. First and
7.
fourth, a camel's
head erased cam-
paned, this is not painted second and third, sable, a chevron between Notes on the margin make the field in the first three fishes haurient. ;
and fourth sable, and the bell or the quartering is said to be Fisher, and the field marked azure. Panther of yt Ilk. The seal of Patrick Panter, Abbot of ;
engraved in the Chartulary printed for the Gramdiffers from this coat it has on a fess between three roundles The arms mullets as many (?). registered about 1672, by William Panton alias Panther of Blackhouse, and Captain George Panton alias Panther, who are both stated to descend from the family of Pitmedden, are or, an eagle displayed sable, in chief a rose gules between two mullets of the second. This almost looks like an attempt to attach the old Aberdeenshire family of Panton to a Forfarshire race of Panters or Painters, who rose to considerable eminence in the fifteenth and sixteenth
Cambuskenneth, pian Club, and
is
;
—
centuries.
Finlaw de Pantre was in the service of David II. David Paneter had a charter, 20th March 1407, from the Regent Duke of Albany, of the lands of Cragoch and Ardoch, in the barony of Logic, CO. Forfar.
Andrew Paneter was bailie of Montrose 1389, and married Janet Stewart Andrew Panter, burgess of Montrose, and William of Craw;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
1 1
3
mond, had a Crown charter, 23rd February 1400, of parts of Inghane, Little Carcary, Balnamone, and Kynnarde, equally between them on the resignation of Anna Portare. David Panter, 141 1, held part of the lands of Kinnaird, which he is said, without proof, to have acquired by marriage with a lady of the
name
of Kinnaird.
Walter Painter was Abbot of Arbroath 141 1 to about 1450; in 1452 John Panter was bailie of Montrose. The arms of the Abbot in the chapter-house are a fess charged with three roundles (?), in chief the head of a crozier between two mullets, in base a rose.
David Penneter or Panter, burgess of Montrose, probably married a Scot, related to Robert Scot, burgess of Arbroath, who, 4th January 15 19, granted a charter to the abbot and monks of Arbroath, founding a chaplainry for the singing of masses for the souls of his relatives, including the said David, his wife and children, especially Mr Patrick, late Secretary to the King. This Patrick, Rector of Fetteresso, was Secretary to the King 1505 Abbot of Cambuskenneth 1510-17; Ambassador to France, and died in Paris, 1 5 19. By a feu-charter, dated loth August 15 16, he conveyed
;
Newmains Wallis and
other lands, " dilecto
whom
meo David
Painter juniori
"
David Painter senior, his own brother, whom failing to his sister's son, William Painter or Lamb, whom he describes as " nunc vero filio meo adoptiuo," &c., and the heirs male of their bodies, his own nearest heirs male bearing his name and arms and lastly, to his nearest heirs whomsoever, binding them to assume and bear the surname and arms of Painter. This is a very early instance of a (probably his son),
failing
to
;
man who may be described
2(.s 2i
parvenu showing an anxious desire to found
a family.
The abbot had a
natural son, David, and daughter, Catherine, by Margaret Crichton, Countess of Rothes, who were legitimated in 15 13. David had the vicarage of Carstairs on the resignation of Alexander
Painter 1539, was Secretary of State, Ambassador to France, Bishop of Ross, 1545, Commendator of Cambuskenneth about 1552; he died in 1558. He had shortly before, by three charters in 1556-57, conveyed the extensive lands of Ferindonald, Ardmanach, Arderseir, Duglie, &c., to his uterine brother, whom he also nominated his executor, Robert Leslie,
ancestor of the Leslies of Findrassie.
The question
Mr Mr
occurs, what are the charges on the fess ? Fraser, in his Chartulary of Cambuskenneth, the late and Jervise, Henry " in his all Scottish describe them as roundles. Seals," Laing, supposition has been hazarded that they represent " manchets," and are allusive
Mr
A
took them at once, from the painting here and on farther search find that the. heralds Porteus and Frazer both blazon them " squire's helmets," but the former " loaves of bread." Stacie calls them garbs, gives an alternative blazon, to the office of panetarius. reproduced, to be morions,
which
is
I
obviously wrong. 2 F
WORKMAN'S
114
MS.
family which bore the eagle, and whose name is always Panton, Pantone, or Pantoun, first appears in 1396- 1398- 1402, Oliver and David de Pantone. William of Pantone 1436. James Pandead of Pitmedden and ton of Pitmedden 1451. John Tulymade 1448, Descendants long held Pitmedden, and cadets possessed Tuly1487.
The Aberdeenshire
made, Blackhouse, Craig, Hilton, and held Haddo on wadset, at the close In the eighteenth of the fifteenth and early in the sixteenth century. the name disappears from among the landowners, and is now of rare occurrence.
There
is
no available evidence as to their original coat, but it seems and added to it the rose and mullets when
probable that they bore an eagle, they took the alias Panther.
Zards of yt Ilk. Petbladdo of yt
*Hert of yt
L., 129^.
Ilk,
L.
See another coat for the name, p. 146. Michael Hertt of Lanark is a witness in 1316. Ltber de Calchou. The Harts were a family of Edinburgh burgesses, Edward sitting parliament for the
Ilk.
burgh
in
1586
;
Andrew was
printer to the
king
in
in the
Mr William Haert or Heart of early part of the seventeenth century. Livilands, was advocate to James VI. In 1773 this coat was allowed to Alexander Hart of Baltully, co. Fife, said to be descended from Robert Hart, who was killed at the battle of Otterburn. The style of *' that Ilk," in this and many other cases, is a mere complimentary addition. 8.
HovPE.
9.
HiRTOUN OF YT
L. Ilk.
Myrctoun, but the bearing
L.,
is
repre-
sented as annulets.
The Myretons, Myretouns,
or Mortons were an old and considerable
Fifeshire family, who took their surname from the lands of Myretoun in the parish of Kemback, co. Fife, which remained in their possession till
the middle of the seventeenth century. Having acquired by marriage the more valuable estate of Cambo, near Crail, they made it their residence,
and took
their usual designation
Galfrid de
Merton occurs
from
it.
In 1364 William de Miretoun, as Cambow, has a pension. Three roundles on the seal of his successor, Malcolm de Miretoun, Lord of Cambow, appear 1377John, Dean of Glasgow, was Treasurer of Scotland 1431-33. From 1560 to 1646 the heads of the family frequently sat in parliament. Sir Thomas Myrtoun of Cambo was knighted and named a member of the Privy Council in 1641 commanded a regiment and lost c.
1250.
heir of the late Alexander de
;
His son. Sir Patrick, sold all the family estates, Cambo being parted with in 1668 this was brought about by his own and his father's losses in the public service, which reduced him to such distress that, in 1651, he had a protection granted him from the action of his
life
at Kilsyth 1645.
;
his creditors.
His son, Sir Robert, entered into a curious armorial transaction with a kinsman, Andrew Myrtoun, who had flourished as a merchant burgess
WORKMAN 'S
MS.
115
of Edinburgh, and seems to have been ambitious of refounding the decaying house. In 1686 Andrew, admitted to be descended from the Cambo family, or, three torteaux within a bordure wavy parted per pale registered arms
—
sable and azure
;
crest
— two arms issuing from a cloud drawing an anchor
out of water proper; motto
His career seems
—
"
Undique fultus."
have been chequered, for in 1689 he was sentenced to imprisonment for non-payment of custom on his goods and in 1704 cited before parliament in connection with an inquiry into the public accounts, when it came out that he had made ;;^i 2,000 profit on a loan of to
;
;^36,ooo to the Admiralty. Andrew Myretoun acquired the estates of Gogar and Leny, which were erected into a barony in his favour in 1701, and at the same time he was created a baronet, an honour which expired on the death of his son, Sir Robert, in 1774, without male issue.
The
—
newly-created baronet got his arms changed to argent, a chevron between three roundles sable; crest a pine tree fructed proper; motto " Virtutis prcemmm."
—
This
coat,
recorded in
Andrew Myretoun, and
November
—
1701, did not yet
satisfy
Sir
January following he prevailed on Sir Robert Myretoun to execute a deed by which he did, "upon certain grave and weighty considerations and motives, renounce, overgive, and convey to and in favour of Sir Andrew Myretoun of Gogar, baronet, my right and title to the coat of arms and ensign armoriall belonging to the said in
Myretouns of Cambo, with power
familie of
to the said Sir
Andrew
to
procure the same confirmed to him by the Lyon King of Arms, and thereafter to bear and use the same as his own proper coat armorial." No
arms took place, although this renunciation was, at recorded in the books of the Lyon Court. QuHiTHEDE OF YT Ilk. F., the field is or. family of Whitehead of Park flourished in West Lothian, and in 1585 Philip, Sheriff-Depute, further registration of
a
later period,
A
sat in parliament. The coat, with some alteration, was registered about for Alexander 1672 Whythead of Isles of Alio, with a singular crest
— — motto
a man issuing from water laying hold of a highland mantle '' Abyssus circumdabat me." *RoBERTOUN OF YT Ilk should be Robertson. A seal, 1438, of Robertson of Strowan, has three wolves' heads on a fess, and for crest, a ;
;
wolf statant.
The
appears on the seal of John, Treasurer of the arms were registered in 1672 by Alexander of Ross, 1589. Strowan, they were simply three wolves' heads the crest, a hand holding an imperial crown, with the motto, " Virtutis gloria merces" and a " Nota Strowan and his predecessors, since their taking of y^ Murtherer coat, as here given,
When
;
—
of K.
James
lying under
y^ ist,
y**
have always born a Monstruous
Man
chained and
escutcheon."
This is an addition in a later hand there are no .supporters, but a serpent and a dove seem to have been assumed by the family about 1822 (?) ;
1 1
WORKMAN'S
6
MS.
Mertoun
of yt Ilk. See Hirtoun. •Blakstok of yt Ilk. The name is rarely met with, and no family owning lands of the same name has been traced. Rosaith. 10. Stewart of L., the bordure is gules and the buckles
or.
Stewart of Garless.
L,
The plain coat of Stewart. 11. Ye S^- of Buit. Stewartt of Cragy. L., 124. Stewart of Reilstoun. L. Stewartt of Dalswyntoun. L. Stewartt of Gorme. L., the heads resemble those of a horse. Olefantt of Apparently Newton has been blotted .
and Kelly written above. 12. Lord Glen. In third, three pelicans
L., 75. ink. First
and
fourth, a lion
out,
rampant; second
(?).
*Freanch.
French of Thornydikes in the Merse, and of Frenchland in Dumfriesshire, an extinct family. L. 13. FiNTOUN OF YT IlK. BiKERTOUN OF YT IlK. L. Dunbar of yt Ilk. L., 82. Broun of yt Ilk. Gules, a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis or " " " " argent is added on the margin, and Carslut as a designation. The coat given is that of Broun of Colstoun the arms of the ;
;
Carslueth family, in a birthbrief, issued 8th July 1728, to Thomas Broun, an officer in the military service of the King of France, were argent, a chevron gules between three fleurs-de-lis azure. Kyle of that Ilk. L., a note states that the charges are "candelstiks or kylles."
—
Chalmer of yt added
Ilk.
L.,
119, with a fleurs-de-lis gules in base
in ink.
The
four coats on this page are on a larger scale, by a different hand, and seem to be additions at a later date. Betoun of Creich. L. 15,
Sutherland of Duffus. Lawderdalle of yt Ilk.
Wardlaw
of Waristoun.
L., the boar's
head seems to be proper.
L., 61, the field sable.
F.
Cornwell of Ballanefard. The writer compiled
17.* of this Linlithgowshire family,
"
a genealogy Miscellanea Genea-
which appeared in the logica et Heraldica," and was reprinted for private circulation 1877. They were seated at Bonhard early in the fifteenth century, and the direct line ended on the death of Elizabeth, heiress of Bonhard, wife of Sir Alexander Dalmahoy, Bart., in 1763. Robert de Cornewall witnessed a charter of Hugh, Bishop of St Andrews, c. 1180; the seal of William de Cornall, c. 1230, is a sheaf of corn; Mr Richard Cornell was Archdeacon of Dunkeld 1406. John Cornwall of Bonhard was killed at Flodden his son Peter put the arms with the date 1527 on a stone in the house of the family in up ;
WORKMAN'S MS. —a Cornish represented
117
crest kae hatching on the Linlithgow, as here " face of a rock motto Ve big ye se varle." Nicholas of Bonhard sat in parliament 1592-99, and was provost of Linlithgow Walter of Bonhard represented the county in parliament 1625; Walter of Bonhard was impoverished by the failure of the Darien scheme, having taken shares in the company. From a younger son appears to have descended James Cornwall of Bonhard Lodge, a Commissioner of Excise in Scotland, whose grandson
—
;
;
;
James is now superintendent of travelling post-offices in the presidency of Bombay. *HucHESTOUN OF YT Ilk. Altered to Hudsone. Gardin of that Ilk. F., Gaudine. *Davesoun. On the seal of Mr John Davidson, Parson of Newlands 1536, are a stag trippant, his neck pierced by an arrow in bend sinister, in
base a cinquefoil.
Tailzefeir of yt Ilk. *Carncors of yt Ilk. lie,
CO.
L.
The
seal 1554, of
John Carncors of Coums-
Roxburgh, has the stag's head couped with a mullet between the Andrew Cairncross of Cumsley, registered c. 1672 argent, a head erased, between the attires a cross crosslet fitchde surmounted
—
attires.
stag's
of a mullet,
all
gules.
About the same
time, Patrick Cairncross of Balmashanner, co. recorded Forfar, azure, a stag's head erased argent attired of ten tynes or, between the attires a cross crosslet of the third. These lands had for about two centuries given a designation to his
—
ancestors, who probably descended from Duncan de Caryncros, witness to a charter of a Maule of Panmure, an^e 1325.
In 1528 Nicol Cairncross sat in parliament as Deputy of the Constable of Scotland. The same year Robert Cairncross was Lord High Treasurer, being Abbot of Holyrood in 1539 he was Bishop of Ross and Abbot of Fearn, and died in 1545. His seal has a stag's head couped without any other charge. In the south Colmslie, Calfhill, Hilslop, and other lands were long ;
in the possession of the Cairncrosses, of
whom was
Alexander, Bishop of Brechin 1683, Archbishop of Glasgow 1684, and Bishop of Raphoe from 1693 till his death in 1701, when his estate of Manderston, in Berwickshire, was inherited by his nephew, George Home of Whitfield, ancestor of the present George Home of Whitfield, who quarters the coat of Cairncross argent, a stag's head, erased gules, betwixt the attires a cross crosslet fitchde of the last. This is as it is given by Nisbet for the in a seal engraved in "An Inquiry as to the Armorial archbishop, but Insignia of the City of Glasgow," printed in 1866 for private circulation, by A. Macgeorge of Glenarn, Esq., the mullet appears as in the recorded arms of the Colmslie branch. 19. KiNCAiD of ye Touris (?). The last word has a line drawn through " " Ilk is added in a different hand. it, and L., there are three mullets in
—
chief. 2
G
1 1
WORKMAN'S
8
•Or of yt
Probably Orde of that
Ilk.
MS. Ilk, co., Banfif.
The
coat has
1731 for the Lanarkshire family of Orr, except that the crosses appear on a chief in the latter the earlier owners of Orde were named Davidson, and took the surname from their
no resemblance
to that recorded in
;
lands,
c.
1400.
Wastoun
of yt Ilk. •Russell of yt Ilk.
The
heiress
married Ramsay, and their
descendants, seated at Russell, quartered the coat which is entered in the Lyon Register in 1672, and afterwards by cadets. Other Russells in Scotland seem to have desired to attach themselves, so far as bearing
arms would do
so, to the ducal family of Bedford. Russel of Russel alias Longridge, in Clydesdale, 1759 James physician in Edinburgh, had a grant of arms argent, a lion rampant gules, with a chief and other charges and a few years later a similar coat was granted to the ancestor of the family of Russell of Aden. John, son of Robert Russel of Duncanlaw, made a grant to the House of Soltre ante 1220. John Russel, an Englishman, married the Countess of Menteith,
similar
In
—
;
c.
1258.
to
Henry Russel witnessed an the monks of Paisley.
early charter of
Angus
filius
Dovenaldi
In 1291 Robert Russel, burgess of Berwick; and in 1296 he or a to Berwickshire did homage to Edward I. Robert I. confirmed to John de Carrick, son of William called Russell, the lands of Darsquen in Dumfriesshire, and Robert Russell had
namesake belonging
a charter from David II. of Sympleland in the same county. Mr John Russell was Justice Depute in 1588, and during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries several persons of the name represented St Andrews and Pittenweem in parliament. Seal of Gilbert Russey (?) of Thornton, 1292 a lion rampant charged with three chevronels.
—
*Masoun of yt entries in the
land.
Lyon .
Ilk.
This coat occurs twice among the
Register, but the
name was
earliest
certainly not taken
from
.
*DiK OF THAT Ilk. verting a personal name
Another of the complimentary additions, coninto a local one. 23. *MURRAY OF CoLBEN. Spens of Aberdeen. P., Warmiston. Ramsay of Dunoun. L., the crescents are or and the eagle is all sable. Blair of Adamtown. L. Wallange of Lochene. L., \oob. Mortymer of Babreich. L., the lion is not armed and langued
gules. 23. (Crombie).
Name
obliterated, but the coat is elsewhere given for
Crombie.
Balfour of Carristoun. heads erased sable in
chief,
and a
Argent, a chevron between two leaf vert in base.
otters'
WORKMAN'S
MS.
119
BoRTHiuK OF Crukstoun.
CrukL., 73, the eagle's head couped. scored out, and Collelaw written above it. The coat given by Sir David Lyndsay was recorded c, 1672 for William Borthwiek, M.D., representer of the family of Gordonshall, co. Fife. stoun
is
CoLQUHOUN OF Luss. L., a series of the seals of this family is en" The Chiefs of Colquhoun and their Country," by William graved in Fraser.
One
as early as 1475 has two to be borne.
hounds as supporters, which continued
be remarked that argent, a saltire engrailed sable, is also the coat of Haldane of Gleneagles. The Earl of Seafield is heir general, and It
may
inherits the baronetcy conferred in 1625 on Sir John Colquhoun of Luss ; the estates have descended under an entail to Sir James Colquhoun, now
of Luss, baronet,
who
marriage, in 1702, of
represents the second son who survived of the Anne, only child of Sir Humphrey Colquhoun, with
James Grant of Pluscardine. It would appear to be in Sweden that we must look for an heir male. Hugh Cahun revealed the conspiracy headed by Charles de Mornay in September 1574, and lost his life in spite of a promise of pardon, Walter, fourth son of Alexander Colquhoun of Luss, by Helen Buchanan, his wife, went to Sweden in 1629 his descendants were called Caun-Scotus till, in 1689, Jacob was ennobled under the name of ;
Canonhjelm, and at a later period another of the family as Gahn of Colquhoun. In 1 78 1 Henry Cahun, vulgo Gahn, physician to the Admiralty in Sweden, had a formal recognition from his kinsman the laird of Luss, and registered arms. The saltire, perhaps by an error of the Swedish a lion rampant sable was added heralds, had been converted, into a cross ;
being the Buchanan bearing, to indicate the generation to which the founder of the Swedish line belonged. in the dexter canton,
* Ramsay
of Russell. Carrutheris of Mouswald. 24. Three coats added in ink.
L. .
(Oliphant), S. W. O. Gules, a mullet between three crescents argent; crest—a unicorn's head issuing from a crescent argent motto " In vir;
—
tute qiiies." The tinctures are supplied by the entry of the funeral of Sir Williarn Oliphant of Newton, Lord Advocate, who was buried in the Greyfriars'
Church, Edinburgh, April 1628.
*Ballewaird of that Ilk, or rather, Balvaird of Glentarkie, being one of Sir William Oliphant's quarters displayed at his funeral, his mother having been a Gibb of Carriber, and her mother a Balvaird the tinctures are supplied from the Lyon Register 1672. Carsane. a fess between three mascles in chief, and in base a crescent between two mullets. The two last words struck out and Carriber 25. *GiB of yt Ilk. ;
added.
WORKMAN'S
I20
*DoG OF YT Ilk. GouRLAY OF THAT
Ilk.
MS.
L., the coat of
Gourlay of Kincraig, as rean eagle displayed argent, which
1672 for Sir Thomas, is sable, appears in K. This coat, with two eagles argent for supporters, was confirmed in 1865 to the Rev. William E. C. Austin-Gourlay of Kincraig, co. Fife, as representative of this baronial family. Seal of Henry de Gourlay, 1286 an orle fretty.
gistered
c.
—
Cairnis of Orcherton. Melvill of Raith. L.
F.
DuRHAME of YT
Ilk, as Durward, L. 26. *PouRVES. This coat, the tinctures being altered, was allowed to Sir William Purves, who was created a baronet 1665. The seal of William Purves of Mospennoch, co. Peebles, c. 1230, has
a hunting-horn. Steinsone, in ink argent, a chevron between two (cocks' ?) heads couped in chief, and a fleur-de-lis in base gules, on a chief of the second
—
three mullets of the
field.
Lawsone of Boghall.
a saltire and
chief, the latter
charged with
three garbs. 27.
Knowis of YT
Ilk.
L., these are the
arms of a family of Knows,
Knox, Knollis, of that Ilk, in the parish of Deer, co. Aberdeen, quite distinct from Knox, co. Renfrew. Its most distinguished member was William Knollis, Preceptor of Torphichen and Lord of St John, Treasurer of Scotland, and Master of the Royal Household. He was Preceptor in 1468, and held the high office of Treasurer as late as 1492, sitting in parliament as a lord, and generally taking precedence next to the earls. This coat appears on his seal A.D. 1470.
George Knollis married Christian, daughter of Sir Archibald Edmonstone of Dunbreath, widow of John Lord Ross, who was killed at Flodden, but they were divorced on the plea of consanguinity. It is not a little remarkable that Sir Robert Knolles, who served under the Black Prince with distinction, and died at a very great age in 1407, bore the same arms, as shown by his seal and representations in He is generally said to have the churches of Harpley and Withyam. been from Cheshire and of obscure origin, but if we may trust to armorial evidence, there is a probability that Scotland may claim this successful soldier of fortune. He left no descendants, although the Earls of Banbury claim to derive their origin from him, and quartered his coat with their own, which was dissimilar. *FowLERtouN OF YT Ilk. Thcsc arms, the heads being erased, appear on the seal of William Fulertoun of Ardo 1575.
The
seal of Fullarton of
Fullarton in Ayrshire, a
little earlier,
has a
charged with three ermine spots. There were two families styled of that Ilk Fullarton of Fullarton and Corsbie, co. Ayr, and Fullarton of Fullarton, near Meigle, co. Perth. Robert I. granted a charter, in the twenty-first year of his reign, of these fess
—
WORKMAN'S
MS.
121
Perthshire lands, to Galfrido de Foullertoun, as fowler to the King's
Household
at Forfar.
—NisbetQ).
charters of lands, co. Ayr, from David 11. Sir Adam de Foulertoun, of the county of Ayr, lived at the accession of Robert II., and held the lands of Foulertoun as heir of his deceased
Thomas Foullartoun has
Alan de Foulertoun.
father,
The Ayrshire
In Fullartons often took the designation of Corsbie. Forfarshire Fullerton of Kinnaber, a branch of the other family of that Ilk, held a good position for many generations, and bore two mullets on
Nisbet calls the heads those of the otter, and in 1696 William Fullertoune of that Ilk, co. Ayr, entered in the Lyon Register a simple coat of argent, three otters' heads erased gules, which, with differences, was matriculated by several cadets of his line, while none of the Forfarshire and Perthshire families have ever recorded arms. Porteus, Snowdoun Herald, seems to have despaired of clearing up all this confusion, for he has Fullerton of Corsbie, i.e., of that Ilk, Ayrshire argent, a fess and three boars' heads gules aliter, three otters' heads erased aliter, three wolves' heads erased in the accompanying painting in Workman's MS. they rather resemble dogs' heads. The Fullartons of Dunnone ended in an heiress towards the end of the
fess.
—
—
;
;
;
the fifteenth century. Fullarton of Kilmichael, in the island of Arran, has been seated there since 1329, and bears a crescent between three otters' heads. Kynarde of yt Ilk. L., the saltire and crescents are argent, but " " or is written over them. These charges appear on the seals of William de Kinnard 1402, and of Reginald de Kynarde a.d. 1425 but that ;
appended by Radulfus de Kinard to a deed of homage to Edward I. The barony of in 1296 has a saltire and four cross crosslets fitchde. Kinnaird, co. Perth, was sold in 1618 by John Kinnaird to Sir John Livingstone, ancestor of the Earls of Newburgh. Ranald Kinnaird and Marjory Kirkaldie, his spouse, had a charter from Robert III. of the barony of Inchture, co. Perth. Their descendant, Sir George Kinnaird of Inchture, registered, about 1672, the above coat, with the saltire and crescents or, quarterly with Kirkaldie when raised to ;
the peerage 1682, he dropped the Kirkaldie quartering, and had a grant of "ane honourable additament and coat of augmentation," to be borne in the first and fourth quarters or, a fess wavy between three mullets
—
gules.
*Wyntoune of Strakmartein.
About 1672 Patrick Wintone of
—argent, registered
a chevron between three from that given for the name by Lindsay and Forman, and rather resembles that on the seals of sixteenth century, where a persons of the name of Winchester early in the other chevron and two birds in chief are borne with charges. in several counties in land of as owners of the name Persons figure the fourteenth century, and in 1417 David de Wyntoun, Lord of Handot. Strickmartine, co. Forfar, This coat turtle doves azure.
ScHERES OF YT
Ilk, L.
is entirely different
Sir David Lyndsay makes this family Lords 2 H
WORKMAN'S
122
MS.
In 1408 the Duke of Dundee, a title for which there seems no ground. of Albany confirms a charter of sale of lands near Dundee by Sir Patrick Gray to Robert de Seres, a burgess of Dundee. Towards the close of the century a family of Seres of Cragnathro, co. Forfar, occurs. *TowNis OF THAT Ilk. Sir Robert of Toynge, Treasurer of the Queen's Household 1329, is the most conspicuous person of a name that may be identified with this. L., there is an indication of a chevron 29. Facunar of yt Ilk.
between the three hawks'
lures.
*SwYFT. James II., soon after his burgess and bailie of Edinburgh, security
accession, gives to for ^430 advanced
John Swyft, by him; and
the Chartulary of St Giles' contains frequent notices of the family. Clapen of Clulogane. L., the crown is an antique one, and there is
no
label.
Bruchen. (Wischart added
in a different hand).
Argent, three piles
in point gules.
Mr H.
Laing describes the charges on the
seal of
David de Brechin,
to his deed of
homage 1292, as three pales; but that attached to the Baron's letter to the Pope, a.d. 1320, has three piles in point. appended
The arms were quartered by
the
Maules of Panmure, with the
field or.
MuNCURE OF YT
Ilk.
L., the field argent.
WiNDRAME
OF YT Ilk. The arms on the monument of John Wynram, Prior of Portmoak, 1582, are a ram with a garb in dexter chief. The surname does not appear to be a local one, but persons of the name possessed Wiston, co. Lanark; Nether Liberton, near Edinburgh; CurrieWiston was carried by an heiress into the hill, also in Mid-Lothian. family of Lockhart of Cleghorn. George Winram was a senator of the of in the reign of Charles II., and was mortally wounded Justice College at the battle of Dunbar, being also colonel of a regiment. L. 30. GUTHRY OF YT IlK. The arms and pedigree of King of Barra, co. Aberdeen, 31. *KiNG. and of Lord Eythen, have recently been the subject of much discussion in Notes and Queries. No arms registered for the name till c. 1750. Carnis. First and fourth, gules, three martlets argent second and third, azure, three leopards' faces or. The seal, a.d. 1455, of William de Cairnis, Vicar of Glammis, has a ;
star of six points, with three birds on a chief David II. grants to John Cairns the Peill of Linlithgow, he being obliged to build it for the King's coming and in the thirty-fifth year of ;
same
reign, William de Carnys and Duncan, his son and heir, have a charter as to the holding of their lands of Whitburn. The name is probably derived from Cairns in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, where there were Cairns of Orchardton, whose coheirs married Kirkpatrick, Maxwell, and Kennedy about the middle of the sixteenth century Cairns of Tor Cairns of Barnebachill, &c. Mr Richard Cairns of Pilmure registered, c. 1672 gules, three
the
;
;
—
*
i
^»1»
?>>
^
V^^^'S
WORKMAN'S
MS,
123
martlets argent, a fleur-de-lis for difference. He was succeeded by his William Borthwick. The coat here nephew, quartered is given by Le
Bouvier
for
Maligny,
?
Maghie.
Meluile. Gules, a fess between three crescents argent. These charges are found on the seal of John Melville of Raith, co. The arms of this Fife, 1412; and of Nicholas Melville, date not known. family, whose ancestor, Galfrid de Malevile, is witness to a charter in 1
have varied much. of Robert de Maleuyn, appended to a deed of homage to The high position of the family 1292, has a lion rampant. shown by no less than twelve of its members, one of them, a knight,
165,
The seal Edward I. in is
taking the oath of fealty in 1296. In H. M. Record Office there
a seal of an early date of James Maleuil, the charges being a garb surmounted of a fess. The chief line, seated on the barony of Melville, co. Edinburgh, ended, late in the fifteenth century, in Agnes, Lady of Melville, mother of John, first Lord Ross of Hawkhead. Their descendants have always is
—
quartered for Melville gules, three crescents argent within a bordure of the second, charged with eight roses of the first, and retained the Melville estate
till
1760.
Richard de Maleuille, of the county of Fife, 1296, was probably ancestor of the Raith family, who, in the sixteenth century, dropped the crescents, thus reducing the coat to argent, a fess gules, as given by Sir David Lyndsay. When raised to the peerage in 1616, or perhaps earlier, the old coat of Melville of that Ilk was quartered with this, being placed first and fourth; in the Lyon Register, 1673, this is entered by George Lord Melville, and with a difference by his brother, James of Cassingray. At the same time two cadets of Raith are allowed the old coat without the Raith quarter but Melville of Auchmoor, apparently also a Raith cadet, has the fess gules, charged with three crescents, and differenced. The seal of Richard Melville, 1526-68, is a fess charged with a ;
mullet.
But there is a third coat in 1449 Robert Melville seals with three cushions, and in 1473 George Melville with a fess between three cushions, and charged with two mullets. :
—
In 1685 Melville of Carnbee, co. Fife, records or, three cushions gules, each charged with a crescent argent, all within a bordure of the From this family derive second, charged with eight roses of the first. the existing Barons Melville von Carnbee in Holland. In 1773 Major-General Robert. Melville of Strathkinnes, descended from a younger son of Sir John of Carnbee, was allowed to revert to the coat of Melville of that Ilk, with a crescent for difference, so that it may be said that in this family arms are hardly indicative of descent and also, it might almost be thought that Melville of Carnbee was a Dunbar, of the stock of the Earls of Moray. On the monument of Sir John Melville of the Carnbee family, at ;
WORKMAN'S
124
MS.
—
Inch, near Downpatrick, are cut his arms the shield defaced, with two birds as supporters, with the date 1628, and initials I. M. and A. R. Younger of yt Ilk. This replaces another name which has been obliterated, and is in a different hand. Argent, three piles sable, each
charged with an annulet of the
field
;
on a chief gules a crescent or between
two cinquefoils of the first. Younger is not a local name.
Spens of Wilmestoun. *GUTTRE OF LOUNAN, 32.
The
*RiCHESOUN.
seal,
1566, of
Mr
As
F., 1572, the field or.
There is added in another hand " of Smyttone." Robert Richardson, Commendator of St Mary's
and High Treasurer of Scotland, has nearly these bearings, the being on the field instead of on a fess. Patrick of Drumsheugh, The seal of Sir James 1507, uses two arrows in saltire, points upwards. of Smeaton, 1627, is a saltire between a bull's head erased in chief and a Isle,
saltire
crescent in base.
His grandson, Sir James of Smeaton,
—
Bart., recorded, c. 1678 or, on in chief and a lymphad in base
a fess azure between a bull's head couped sable, a saltire argent. The same is given in 1661 in Porteus' MS., and also another Richardson coat parted per fess argent and azure, a lion counterchanged this seems to have been taken as a model for a crest for Sir James in 1678 a lion rampant parted per fess or and azure, holding in his forepaws a laurel garland. On this page is an unfinished coat without a name on a fess between three mascles or a mullet. L., a cross patde gules, in place of the 33. Mercer of Mekilour. in base. mullet This is one of those families the origin, development, and variations of whose arms deserve some study. Walter, son of Alan the Steward, granted Tullicoultry to Alcunus Meser, whose son and successor, of the same name, resigned them into
—
—
;
—
the King's hands 19th June 1261. Bernard le Mercer, burgess of Perth, did
homage
to
Edward
I.
1296.
John Mercer, burgess of
that burgh, and several times provost, made a large fortune; married before 1328 Ada Murray of the Tullibardine family; was, in 1355, commissioner from Perth to treat for the liberation of David II. sat in the general council 1364 and 1376 and acted as re;
;
ceiver of revenue while the office of Chamberlain
charters of Meikleour
The
was vacant.
He
had
and Aldie 1362-64.
of his son, "Andrew Mercer, Lorde of Mekylhour," to his award, 1385, in a dispute submitted to his decision
seal
appended between Robert, Earl of Fife and Menteith, and John of Logy, has a chevron between three mullets. These were the bearings at that time of Sir Andrew's mother's family, and it is probable that by him they were carried with a variation His crest is a peacock's head. of tincture.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
125
The same coat, with a label of three points for difference, was borne Robert Mercer of Innerpeffry, a cadet, on his seal 1454-65 but in the by former year Andrew of Inchbrakie uses a fess charged with three roundles between two cross crosslets fitchde in chief, and a mullet in base, the ;
latter evidently the
Murray charge retained while the character of the was otherwise bearings changed entirely. The roundles, besants, or plates evidently allude to the wealth acquired by commerce by the founder ;
of the family. David of Innerpeffry, 1483, retains the chevron, but entirely drops the mullets, and has in their place three cross crosslets fitchde a bird's head is the crest. ;
George, Abbot of Inchaffray 1469, uses a chevron between two indistinguishable charges in chief and a mullet in base. The seal of Robert of Balleif, 1468, is a fess charged with three roundles, with other charges obliterated. But Sir James Balfour gives a blazon for Balleif in 1453 or, on a
—
between three crosses patde gules three plates. In an illuminated MS. added to Sir James Balfour's, are given Aldie, argent, on a fess gules between three cross crosslets fitchde sable as many mullets of the field this coat, I incline to think, is Tulloch under a wrong name, for farther on is given Meikleour, or, on a fess gules between two cross crosslets fitch^e of the second in chief and a mullet fess
—
—
;
azure in base, three plates. In 1504 Sir Henry Mercer of Meikleour seals with the arms which have the high authority of Sir David Lindsay, and in 1565 Laurence of Meikleour had added a third cross patee in chief. This appears cut at Aldie with the date 1569 crest the head and neck of a stork with a ;
—
— "Thi
—two
naked hands clubs resting on the ground. About 1672 Mrs Grizel Mercer of Aldie registered the arms without " Crux supporters, and with a cross patde or for crest, and the motto of with marks The same Christi nostra corona!' arms, cadency, were entered about that time for cadets, with differences and variations of crest, none of them having the stork's head. It has been suggested that the crosses patde may have been assumed to commemorate a Barclay alliance, and the motto of Mrs Grizel Mercer serpent in
its
men holding
is
mouth; motto
grit pool;" supporters
in their exterior
also that of
some
families of Barclay.
supposed to have been Nisbet describes the closely resemble the coat motto he spells " Ye gret
is
Sir
Andrew
Mercer's wife, Janet,
a Barclay.
arms of Sir Lawrence Mercer
in his time,
which
described as cut for Sir Laurence in 1569; the pule," and the supporters have helmets on their
heads.
48 1 Sir Lawrence Mercer sat in parliament, and many members of the family afterwards sat for the county and burgh of Perth. The lands of Meikleour and many others were erected into a free In
barony
1
in
favour of
Andrew
Mercer, by
1444-5-
21
Crown
charter,
21st
March
WORKMAN'S
126
MS.
The
of family estates have passed by marriage to the families and and Flahault Nairne, Elphinstone, Emily Jane, DowagerMarchioness of Lansdowne, Baroness Nairne in her own right, is the present owner of Aldie and Meikleour. The male representative is probably William Lindsay Mercer of ;
Huntingtower, co. Perth, whose father, Major William Drummond Mercer of Huntingtower, in 1864, registered the arms of 1672, with the addition of a canton gules charged with a boar's head couped or, for Chisholm the founder of his branch was Robert Mercer of Newton (younger son of Sir Laurence of Meikleour), who married in 1527 Helen, daughter of Edmund Chisholm of Cromlix; crest the head and neck of a stork holding in the beak a serpent writhing proper, with the motto " Ye gret pule" above it, and below the shield "Crux Christi nostra coronal Mr Graeme Reid Mercer of Gorthy, co. Perth, is next in succession, and by his investigations much of the information here given has been ;
—
obtained. coat has been quartered by Maxwell of and was allowed in 1828 to James Dennistoun Calderwood, seal a.d. 1470, of Colgrain the supporters of the family had been granted, 1 771, to James of Colgrain, with the coat recorded, c. 1672, by his ancestor, William of Colgrain, viz. argent, a bend sable between a unicorn's head erased of the second in chief, and a cross crosslet fitchde azure in base. Colgrain was in the possession of William de Danilston in 1377, when he and his elder brother. Sir Robert, Sheriff of Lennox and Keeper of Dumbarton
Dannalstoun.
L.,
this
;
:
Castle, witness a charter of their father, Sir John,
who
styles himself
Lord of Fynlauistoun, Danyelston, and Kylmoloog. Sir Huwe de Danilston did homage to Edward L 1296, and in 1357 Robert, son of Sir John de Danyelston, was a hostage for the payment of the ransom of David n. BONAR OF ROSSEE, L. Fentoun of Baky. Argent, three crescents gules, being entirely different from the Fentoun coats in Lindsay and Forman. The crescents are on the seal, 1292, of Sir William de Fentun, Lord of Beaufort, which he had acquired by marriage with Cecilia Byset, and of Janet, daughter and coheir of Walter de Fen ton of Bakie, co. Forfar, 1448-72-89; the seal of 1448 has the addition of a label of three points. Three persons of the name took the oaths to Edward L 1292-96, and John de Fenton one of the barons who signed the letter to the Pope 1320. John de Fenton was Sheriff of Forfar 1261. Elizabeth, sister and heiress of John Fenton of that Ilk, in East Lothian, married, c. 1525, Whitelaw of that Ilk, and Fenton passed by marriage of Isobel Whitelaw to her husband, Andrew Kerr of Fenton. The seal of William Fenton, 1450, is a chevron between three crescents. Karcady of ye Grange. L., argent, two mullets in chief and a crescent in base gules. The bearings on the seals of James de Kirkaldi 1357, and Elizabeth Kirkaldi 1582, are two crescents and a mullet, while that is
WORKMAN'S
*
MS.
127
of James Kyrkelde, 1546, has a fess between two stars in chief and a crescent in base. The Kirkaldy coat, entered in the Lyon Register as a quartering by Sir George Kinnaird, is gules, three stars argent ; about the same time Sir John Kirkaldy of Grange, baronet, recorded gules, a
chevron argent between three stars in chief and a crescent in base or. The writer may be allowed to refer to the fate of the descendants of the gallant Sir William Kirkaldy, as first traced in a paper on the Kerrs of "
His only child, Mary KirGenealogist." kaldy, married, in 1561-2, Sir Thomas Kerr of Fernihirst, and died in about six years their second son, William Kerr, took the name and designation of Kirkaldy of Grange, and married, in 1586, Elizabeth, daughter of John Fernihirst, contributed to the
;
Lord Glammis, Lord Chancellor of Scotland. The son of this marriage seems to have transferred Grange to the heir male of the Kirkaldys, and ^resumed his paternal surname on the death of Andrew Lord Jedburgh in 163 1, the right to that title passed to this Alexander Kerr, but the estate being ruined, he never assumed it in 1654 his son, John Kerr, heir male of his status as Fernihirst established by three different services, ;
;
but still does not appear to have claimed the peerage. On his death without issue, the descendants of the ill-fated Kirkaldy seem to have become extinct, and the barony of Jedburgh was confirmed in 1670 to the nearest heir male.
John Kircaldie of Grange was created a baronet 14th May 1664, with remainder to the heirs male of his body. The Exchequer Rolls, 1331, contain a payment to John de Kirkcaldy. Stewart of Bowkill. L., the bend is engrailed. Or, a fess checquy vert and argent between in chief a 34. Blyth. mascle between two crescents, and in base three garbs, tinctures not given. Richard Blyth, 1567, represented Dundee in parliament.
a
*Cars of Mounkounhall.
engrailed or between two mullets in chief argent and a crescent in base of the second, a bordure The Carses of Cockpen and Fordel, co. engrailed also of the second.
Edinburgh, made some figure being knighted.
fess
in the seventeenth century,
The arms recorded by him
in 1673, as Sir
one of them
Mark Carse
of Fofdel-
carse, are different ; argent, on a saltire vert between four cross crosslets Stacie gives the other coat, making fitchde gules, five crescents of the field.
the field azure, and calling the fess a bar. 35.
Betoun of Balfour.
As
F.,
Ogill of Popill.
L., the birds
Mr
seal, 1538,
Laing gives the
Betoun of Creich.
resemble martlets.
of Patrick Ogil of Hawtreewood, one
bittern passant. Popill, in Haddingtonshire,
before 1480;
on a
Mr David
fess gules three
was
in the possession of
James of Ogil arms c. 1672— argent,
Ogill of Popill registered cocks passant or, in middle chief a crescent of the
second.
DiscHiNTOUN OF Ardros. L., thcsc are the bearings on the seal of William de Dyscingtoune, 137 1, appended to the act settling the succession
WORKMAN'S
128
MS.
Crown. He had shortly before inherited a third of the baronies of Ardross and Currie from his kinsman, John Burnard was steward of the King's Household and Sheriff of Fife. William sat in several parliaments. The arms were quartered by Hamilton of Kilbrackmont, descended from a coheiress. Sprewll of Cowden. L., argent, a chevron between three purses to the
;
or cushions gules.
Wardlaw of Torre.
L., the
second and third quarters are
or,
three
water bougets sable. The seal of Walter, Archbishop of Glasgow 1368, is on a fess between three mascles as many crosses. The coat given by Sir D. Lyndsay is on the seal of Sir Henry Wardlaw 1444, and was registered c. 1672 by Sir Henry Wardlaw of Pitreavie, Bart.
TOSHACH OF MONYVAIRD. F. 36. WiLSONE OF Kroglyne. Argent,
a chevron gules between two MS. note, mullets in chief of the second, and a crescent azure in base. Wilson of Absounyer argent, on a pale gules a sword proper issuing out of a crescent argent crest a fox's head or. The latter coat does not appear in the Lyon Register, but that given
—
;
—
for the family of Croglin, co. Dumfries, is repeatedly entered, from 1672 The French herald. Marc Vulson de la onwards, with variations. Colombi^re, belonged to a family of Scottish origin settled in Dauphin^,
—a hand —argent, a chevron between three mullets gules — holding a spiked club; motto "Pour bienfaire T supporters— two savages
and bore
;
crest
wreathed about the head and middle with ivy, holding clubs he states that these supporters were borne of old by his ancestors in Scotland, but I have not found evidence of any family bearing, or in such a position as to ;
entitle
them
In
1
77
1
to bear, supporters.
Alexander Wilson of Glanderston,
co.
Renfrew, the head of
a family owning land in that county for several generations, registered a savage wreathed this coat with differences, and was allowed supporters round the middle with oak, resting one hand on a club proper, and a negro holding a hatchet erect proper, wreathed about the head and middle
—
argent.
Wilson of Finzeauch, wolf salient
in Aberdeenshire,
c.
1672, registered
—
sable,
a
or, in chief three estoiles argent.
Argent, a chevron azure between two mullets of the second in chief, and a crescent in base gules. This name may be of French origin, but appears in Scotland in the
Crokcat, a Frenchman.
thirteenth century.
1296 Huwe Croket of Kameslank, and William Croketa of Kylbride, both in Lanarkshire, swore fealty to Edward I. Andrew Croket was rector of Kilbucho and Corry, and chaplain to Sir James Douglas of Dalkeith, by whom he was named executor in his wills made in September 1390 and December 1392. In Edinburgh there was, in the seventeenth century, a wealthy burgess family, of whom Elizabeth, In
WORKMAN'S
MS.
129
Thomas Crokat of Johnstounburn, co. Haddington, married, in 1733, Andrew Broun of Braid, near Edinburgh. L., the crowns are antique, as now borne. 37. Grantt.
daughter and heir of
Arbothnott.
L,, the
same bearings appear on a
1493, with
seal
dragons as supporters, which continued the supporters when
this existing
family was
raised to the peerage 1641. cadet, in 1 493, has the crescent nott sat in parliament 1487-91.
A
on a
fess.
The Laird
of Arbuth-
A
fabulous antiquity has been claimed for this family, but it is certain that before the middle of the thirteenth century they were seated on the lands they still hold, and from which they took their name. Alwin de Aberbutennauth witnessed a charter of Christian Corbet to the church
Andrews c. 1240. *Red. There is added
at St
Crest—a pheon
;
in
a different hand Reid of Barskiming. et fide." stag's head erased was the
motto — " Virtute
A
bearing of Robert Reid, Bishop of Orkney and Abbot of Kinloss, Lord President of the Court of Session, as on his seal a.d. 1550; his book stamp, with the date 1558, makes the head couped, and below it is the " Moderate." His father fell at Flodden, and was of the family motto, of Reid of Aikenhead, co. Clackmannan. The bishop was the founder of
Edinburgh College. John Reed has a charter of lands near Cardross from David H., and the same king grants the Forest of Lochyndorbe to Symon Reed, constable of
Edinburgh Castle. Barskimming, co. Ayr, was acquired by William Rede
1370, and in that county several branches of the family long held lands of considerable extent. L., Sir James Balfour gives for Tindaill, anno the seal of John Tendel, mascles in fess or.
Tendalle. azure,
two
c.
— 1580, are a
On
1489
—
baker, roses in chief and a
chevron between two burgess of Perth, baker's peel bearing three manchets in base, the chevron charged with a mullet. He left two daughters, both unmarried, in 1623, and the name
seems almost to have disappeared. In 1296 Robert le Tyndale, parson In 1492 John of Grand Dalton, co. Dumfries, swore fealty to Edward L of Tendale held the lands of Over Cullen, and other persons of the surname are to be met with during the fifteenth century. Cheyn of yt Ilk. L., 129^^, the bend or. The seal of Sir Reginald le Chen, appended to his deed of homage to Edward I., is sem6e of cross his son, of the same name, at the same time, crosslets fitch^e a bend charges the bend with three escallops; and in 1320 Reginald- le Chein ;
appends his seal to the Barons' letter to the Pope with three eagles displayed on the bend, Mr Laing says but they rather resemble crosses ;
patde.
Sheriff of Kincardine 1264, and Great Chamberlain of Scotland 1267-69; Henry was Bishop of Aberdeen 1281-1328. Marion, daughter and heir of Sir Reginald Cheyne of Inverugie,
Sir Reginald
was
brought great estates in marriage,
c.
1350, to John, younger son of Sir
2K
WORKMAN'S
I30
MS.
Keith, Great Marischal of Scotland exhibits the bend charged with three mullets.
Edward
;
and her
seal,
A younger
a.d.
1390,
son acquired
Essilmont in Aberdeenshire by marriage with Janet Marshall, and founded a family which long held that estate along with Straloch and Meikle Arnage. In 1678 George Cheine of Essilmont entered his coat in the Lyon Register as quarterly, first and fourth, azure, a bend fitch6e crosses six between argent ; second and third argent, three pat6e leaves slipped vert for Marshall crest a cross as in the arms motto " Patientia vincii." This family were, in the fifteenth century, sometimes
—
—
;
—
;
designed of that Ilk, Robert II., in the seventh year of his reign, granted a charter of confirmation of the lands of Essilmont and Meikle Arnage to William Marshall, son of Malcolm Marshall, on the resignation of his said father. Essilmont passed from the possession of the Cheynes about 1685, but a branch remains in Shetland, and several cadets, in the seventeenth century, with duly accredited birthbriefs, went to try their fortunes on the Continent. Rattray. L., the crosses argent, on the seal of Silvester de Rattray seals of persons three, two, and one 1465, are six cross crosslets fitchde
—
of the
;
name
That
exhibit great variations. of John, Bailie of Aberdeen 1504, has a fess between three cross
and an ermine spot in base while Alexander, in 1628, uses a chevron between three roses, and charged with a rose between two mullets. Silvester of Rattray sat in parliament 1481. The name is taken from the barony of Rattray, co. Perth, of which the Athole family took violent possession about 1520, and assassinated His brother regained possession Patrick Rattray, the heir of the family. of parts of the estate, including Craighall, which was erected into a barony in the seventeenth century, and is known as Craighall-Rattray. Its present owner descends from a daughter of the family, the printed genealogies of which are incomplete and unsatisfactory. In 1 77 1 Thomas Rattray of Craighall registered as his arms azure, crosslets fitchde in chief,
;
—
three cross crosslets fitch6e or.
An
addition to Stacie's
MS. mentions
that Rattray of that Ilk bore
two serpents or adders, tails nowed proper, and gives the The azure, a fess between three cross crosslets fitch^e or. supporters, although not allowed in 1771, were granted in 181 7 to the heir of entail, James Clerk-Rattray of Craighall-Rattray, as two serpents for supporters
arms as
nowed
proper.
Or, three birds azure, on a chief gules an acorn between two mullets of the first. 38. Kairinis.
(No name.) Argent, three lilies slipped and leaved proper. *CowsTANE. Sir Ralph Costein is witness to a charter, c. the church of St
A family of
1200, to
at Stirling.
Mary the name
of Couston held some position in the shires of Clackmannan and Perth, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. *MuscHiT OF YT Ilk. Ermine spots or mushetors are the field or
WORKMAN'S
MS,
131
charge in all the coats for this name, and thus the arms are canting. William de Montefixo signed the barons' letter in 1320, and twenty-four years previously David and Richard Muschet, both of the shire of Angus,
swore
fealty to
Edward
I.
In the reign of David II. the Montfitchet or Mushet family lost part of their lands by forfeiture, but branches of the race possessed Tolgarth,
Craighead, Kincairne, Burnbank, &c., and for a time the head of the name was styled of that Ilk Alexander Muschet sat in parliament for ;
The Craighead Stirling 1467-79, and John for the same place in 1585. family remained seated there till nearly the close of last century, and the Callechat branch expired in the male line on the death in 1755 of David Mushet, when the estate passed to his sisters, Margaret and Elizabeth (Mrs Craig.) The only registration of arms is, c. 1680, Robert Mushet, Lieutenant in the military service of the States General, under the Prince of Orange, a second son of Craighead, which family derived from a second son of Mushet of that Ilk ermine, two chevrons gules, a bordure azure charged
—
with eight crescents argent.
This name, now of rare occurrence, has had rather an unpleasant notoriety since the murder of his wife in the King's Park, Edinburgh, in October 1720, by Nichol Muschett of Boghall, who was hanged for the crime. 39.
Dalzell of yt
Ilk.
L., there are spots of
blood on the man's
skin.
*EwART, QuHiTELAW OF YT
Ilk.
The name
is
written over another
word, which might be Quaret. Vert, two swords in a saltire hilts to the dexter, and another fessways hilt to the sinister, in chief an animal's (? This seems to be boar's) head contournd, and in base a heart, all argent. the foundation of a coat, not registered in Scotland, borne by a family of Ewart, formerly of Mulloch, co. Kirkcudbright, one of whom sat in parliament 1678.
The Bodsbeck
coat assigned, in Frazer's Funeral Escutcheons, to Ewart of is argent, on a chief vert three boars' heads erased of the f^eld.
—
Maule of Panmure.
L., Sir
William de Maul did homage
Edward I. 1291. Thomas Maule of Panmure The " Registrum de Panmure," compiled in 1733 by
to
sat in parliament 1360.
the Hon.
Harry Maule
of Kelly, and printed for private circulation 1874, under the editorship of the late John Stuart, LL.D., gives a full account of this family both in France and Scotland, and contains most valuable armorial illustrations. This is one of the few instances where families of the same name in these countries bore similar arms.
The
seal of Petrus
de
w//^5
Maulia, — with nine a a.d. 1224, escallops parted per pale a bordure charged of The tinctures the coat thus sometimes or twelve. period eight France were— parted per pale argent and gules, on a bordure sable borne —two savages wreathed about the escallops argent or or; supporters is
;
at
later
in
middle with leaves, two lions proper, two storks, two apes. In Scotland Willelmus Masculus witnessed a charter of Earl Henry,
1
WORKMAN'S
32
MS.
the Panmure and Brechin estates were 1 152 in and 1646 Patrick Maule of Panmure was acquired by marriage, created Earl of Panmure. The seal of Sir William Maule, a.d. 1296, is parted per pale with eight escallops on the bordure, and some of his descendants bore that
son of David
I.,
ante
;
number, others nine. It is said, but apparently without authority, that the supporters, originally savages, were altered to greyhounds, as always borne since 1646, Several cadets of the Panmure family settled in the reign of James VI. on the Continent. Hawdin of Glenneges. L., two eagles or falcons as supporters " These supporters, are added in ink, also the motto, Suffer, suffer." recorded when borne the were not Mungo Haldane of family, by long Gleneagles entered arms, c. 1672, but have recently been confirmed to the The estate has heir male, Alexander Haldane, Esquire, barrister-at-law. Earl of to the Camperdown, and the heir passed, by a special destination, of line
is
James Gordon-Oswald of Scotstoun, Esq.
Bernard de Hauden made a grant from his lands of Hauden to the religious house of Soltre between 1 190 and 1230. In 1296 Bernard de Hauden, co. Roxburgh, Ayelmer and Eymer, Rauf, parson of Whitsome, co. Berwick; and Robert, also of Berwickshire, did homage to Edward I. John Haldane of Gleneagles sat in parliament 1478-85, and his
CO.
Edinburgh
;
descendants have since very frequently represented the county of Perth. His marriage, c. 1460, to Agnes, daughter and coheir of Murdac Menteith of Rusky, whose mother, Margaret, was daughter and coheir of Duncan, Earl of Lennox, greatly aggrandised the Haldane family. The MS. entitled Gentlemen's Arms, contains a curious variation of the coat -»-azure, an eagle displayed or, surmounted of a saltire engrailed gules. It has been said that the Haldanes acquired their Perthshire estate by marriage with the heiress of Gleneagles of that Ilk. MoFFETT OF YT Ilk. L., Nicol de Moffat was Bishop of Glasgow Robert and Thomas de Moffet, both of the county of Dumfries, 1268-70. did homage to Edward I. a.d. 1296. Robert I. grants a charter to Adam Moffat of the lands of Knocks and Crocks in Eskdale, and to Thomas Moffat of Glencrofts and Swegill, in the same district. In the following reign we find grants of lands forfeited and wadset by the Moffats. In the sixteenth century they were among the unruly clans on the west march, and although various persons of the name possessed Gran&c., seem not to have had a chief with the of Ilk. that The lands granted by Robert Bruce to Adam designation Moffat were still in the family in the seventeenth century.
toun,
Hewck, Auldtoun,
ScHAW OF Sauche.
L.,
a naked savage
is
sketched in ink as one of
the supporters.
Nisbet gives the arms, and for supporters two savages wreathed about the middle with laurel, for Sir John Shaw of Greenock, Bart., heir
WORKMAN'S
MS,
133
male of Sauchie, and they were recorded in 1812 by his heir of entail, Sir Michael Shaw-Stewart of Blackhall and Greenock, Bart., but immediately afterwards, at his request, the dexter supporter was altered to a lion. Earl Cathcart is heir of line. The seal of James de Schaw, 1409, has three covered cups. James Shaw of Sauchie sat in parliament 1467, and afterwards Fergus, Symund, and William del Schawe, all of Lanarkshire, did homage ;
to
Edward
I.
1296.
James Shaw of Sauchie was Ambassador to Edward IV. 1471, Governor of Prince James, and Governor of Stirling Castle, George, Abbot of Paisley, was Lord High Treasurer of Scotland Robert was Abbot of Paisley and Bishop of Moray 1524-27 1494-96. ;
his seal, a.d. 1498, 40.
three covered cups. Tochone. L., these
is
Forbes of
arms were recorded
in 1674
by
Sir Alexander Forbes of Tolquhone, with supporters two greyhounds proper collared gules, and are borne quartered with Leith by his representative. Rev.
William Forbes-Leith of Whitehaugh,
Aberdeen. The unicorns' heads are for Preston Henry de Preston acquired the barony of Formartin in the reign of Robert HL, and a coheiress brought Tolquhoun to her husband, John de Forbes, c. 1420. It was sold in 17 16 by William Forbes, who had, in 1706, married Anne, daughter and heir co.
;
of John Leith of Whitehaugh, whose ancestor, John Leith of Montgarie or Quhythauch, had a patent of arms, dated 17th January 1688, which is not recorded argent, five fusils in fess sable,
—
Pettres. The leaf is torn and the lower part of the shield gone the arms appear to be argent, a lion passant gules, surmounted of a sword paleways, on a chief sable a boar's head couped between a mullet and a ;
crescent argent. 41.
Wemes
of yt Ilk.
and fourth, or, a lion rampant second and third, argent, a lion rampant a note on the margin, to be for Mortimar. L.,
first
gules within an orle sable within an orle sable said, in The seal, 1544, of Sir John Wemyss of that Ilk, is quarterly, in each a swan's head. crest Nisbet says that the quarter a lion rampant second lion has been quartered since 1423. Sir Michael de Wymes and David de Wymes, both of the co. of Fife, did homage to Edward I. in 1296. David deWemys signed the letter to
—
;
;
the
—
Pope 1320.
Gamel, Bishop of St Andrews in 1261, confirmed a charter by Sir John, son of Michael de Wemys, of the Church of Wemys, to the Hospital of Soltre. An earlier charter by John de Methkill, of the said Church of Wemys, to the
same house,
considered be by an ancestor of the Wemyss family who possessed Methkill or Methill, and are supposed to have taken a surname from it first, and afterwards from Wemyss, which became their chief seat. David de Wemyss was Sheriff of Fife a.d. 1339. The laird of Wester Wemyss sat in parliament 1488, and in 1628 the head of the family was raised to the peerage on the death of David, certainly granted before 1240,
to
;
2
L
is
WORKMAN'S
134
MS.
second Earl of Wemyss, 1679, the title and estates passed to his younger daughter, ancestor of the Earl of Wemyss and March the elder is represented by the Duke of Sutherland Wemyss of Bogie became heir male. The Wemyss estates are held by Mr Erskine-Wemyss, cousin of the earl. The arms registered by the second Earl, c. 1672, are or, a lion rampant gules, quartering, argent, a lion rampant sable, said to be for Glen a swan crest supporters two swans proper. These arms, with suitable differences, were entered by cadets of the Wemyss family about the ;
;
—
—
same
—
;
;
time.
Before 1700 the second and third quarters were dropped and the supporters altered to two lions gardant sable, but the swans were resumed. Contradictory accounts have been given as to the coat quartered with Wemyss, but there can be no doubt that it is Inchmartine. The seal of
—
Johnde Hincmartin, appended to the barons' letter of 1320, is billettde a lion rampant. Sir John Wemyss married Isabel, daughter and coheir of Sir Alan Erskine by Isabel de Inchmartine, Lady of Inchmartine. Wemes of Rerese. L., the orle gules is changed to a tressure flowered counterflowered sable. The seal of Thomas Wemyss of Rires,
—a lion rampant quartering a bend, said to be for Bisset.
David and his wife a charter of the lands of Rires was given to Rires, granted by Duncan, Earl of Fife, before 1353. a younger son of the family in the beginning of the fifteenth century, and the heiress of this branch married a cadet of Forbes of Pitsligo their descendant, Arthur Forbes of Rires, registered arms c. 1672, being first and fourth, Wemyss second and third, Forbes. CoLUiLLE. L., the cross moline is on the seal of Eustacia Colvile 1455,
II.
is
confirmed to David
Weems
;
;
1316, with the addition of four cross crosslets fitchde, the bearing of her
deceased husband, Reginald le Chein. Robert de Colvil, Lord of Oxenham and Ochiltree, 1324, also seals with a cross moline.
The Lindsay quarter appears on
Wemyss
the seal of
James
Colvil of East
1547. coat of Philip de Coleuile in Charles' Roll of Arms, 1250-95, is argent, a cross patonce gules, an example of close similarity in bearings between Scotch and English families of the same name.
—
The
A
seal of Sir Robert, 1453, has two lions as supporters, and in 161 1 a savage and a stag or antelope were used. Philip de Coleuille is witness to a charter of King Malcolm 11 60. Thomas of Colevill witnessed a charter of William the Lion to the
burgh of Ayr.
Thomas de Coleuile, Edward I. in 1296. II.
of the county of Dumfries, swore fealty to
Robert Colvill had a charter of the barony of Ochiltree from David Sir Robert of Ochiltree sat in parliament 1469,
The The
family, in 1604, attained to a peerage, which they still hold. printed Colville pedigrees abound in mistakes, and among many
omissions, say nothing of the marriage, in the fourteenth century, to a co-
WORKMAN'S
MS.
135
heiress of Sir James de Lindsay, thus leaving the quartering of that coat unaccounted for. Robert of Hilton, who married Margaret Logan, and was dead in 1503, is made the same person as his son and successor, who married Elizabeth Arnot, and fell at Flodden. William, Abbot of Culross 1531-36, is omitted, as is the marriage of Margaret, heiress of Oxnam, to Andrew Kerr of Fernihirst, in or before
1509.
LuNDY OF Balcony.
L., the first
and fourth, gules, four
pallets
argent.
Anstruder of that
Ilk.
Henry de Anystrother confirms, St Mary of Dryburgh made by his
L.,
1300, a grant to the church of deceased father, Henry. The father has no surname, but in the family pedigrees is identified with Henry, son of William de Candela dominus de Aynstroyir, who confirms a grant, without date, made by his late father to the Abbey of Balmerino. In 1287 Willelmus de Aynestroche had sasine of lands in Tynedale in Northumberland, held by his late father in c^///^ of Alexander III.; he was dead before 28th June 1288, when his son Henry was found to be his heir in a fourth of the manor of Hetherington in Tynedale. In the writ c.
directed to the escheator, and in the inquisitio, the surname is Heynstrother and Aynstrother. Can the Strothers of Newton in Tynedale be a branch of the same family ?
Dominus Henricus de Anstrether, and Aynestrothere, swore fealty to Edward I. In 1291
in
1296 Henry de
In 1270 Sir William of Aynestrother was one of a jury. None of this family sat in parliament before 1665. Sir James was Master of the Household to James VI., and had a gift of the heritable office of carver to the king. Sir William was created a Knight of the Bath 1603. The arms were registered with supporters two falcons wings expanded proper armed gules, jessed and belled or by Sir Philip Anstruther of that Ilk, c. 1672.
—
—
Meldrum of Fyffe. L, 42. MouTRAY of Sifeild, tarer, L. 73,
the chevron or.
in ink,
with the
This family
is
initials R.
M. As Mowl-
frequently confused with the
Moubrays.
Adam
de Multref, burgess of Berwick, swore fealty to Edward
I.
1292.
David
the thirty-sixth year of his reign, grants lands in the barony of Restalrig to Robert Multrere, burgess of Edinburgh. John Multrar represented the. burgh of Ayr in parliament 1463. The Mowtrays held Seafield and lands at Markinch before the middle of the fifteenth century, which were sold in 1631 ; the representatives of the II., in
.
family possessed Rescobie, near Dunfermline, till after 1800 and about 1676 John Moultrie of Rescobie recorded the arms as given by Sir David Lindsay, altering the boar's head from erased to couped; crest a mermaid ;
proper
;
motto
—
—
"
Nunquam
nonjidelis"
WORKMAN'S
136
A cadet
MS.
America in 1729, and was ancestor of the Rev. Gerard Moultrie, vicar of South Leigh, co. Oxford, who claims to be heir male of Seafield. Murray of Balwaird. L., two lions as supporters are added in Below is a sketch in ink of the same arms ink, and a mermaid for crest. and supporters, the only difference being a crescent below the cross patee a demi-lion holding a battle-axe; motto "E auspice phira crest settled in
—
—
;
teutare."
BoswELL OF Balmuto. versed as crest. ;
the arrangement of the quarters retwo greyhounds collared added in ink as supporters, and a falcon
The
L.,
without date, of Eustace de B6iswel has a saltire and a chief charged with a boar's head couped. In the older entries the lion and ribbon are said to be for Abernethy, but apparently without reason Balmuto was acquired about the beginning of the fifteenth century by marriage with Marion Glen, descended from Robert Glen and his wife Margaret, natural daughter of Robert I. seal,
;
;
indicative of this illegitimate descent seems probable that the coat from royalty. Robert de Boseuille witnessed a charter of William the Lyon. In 1296 three persons of the name, all called William, and belonging to the county of Roxburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. Several of the family represented the burghs of Kinghorn and Kirkcaldy in parliament in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In 1722 Balmuto was sold to a cadet, whose heir, through female descent, possesses it, and has registered the arms as given by Sir David is
it
Lyndsay, with a bordure engrailed sable for difference. David, last of the old Balmuto family, died in 1770, and by William David Reid, Esq.
Murray of Tullibardine.
L., a
is
represented
savage and a stag are added in ink
for supporters.
Chartreis of Hemsfield. L., 126. Chartres of Kinfaunis. L., 122. Douglas of Lochlewin. L., the chief much broader and indented. *Wryght of Langsyd. John Wrycht was Constable of Falkland 1407.
Robert Wright, physician in Rome, descended from a Stirlingshire family, obtained a birthbrief in 1732, his arms being the above with a thistle in the centre.
William Rogers, a musician, one of the 44. *RoGEER of yt Ilke. favourites of James III., had a charter of the lands of Traquair 1469, which he sold nine years this person, given in
Mr
James, Earl of Buchan. The seals of Laing's Catalogue of Seals, are not looked upon later to
as authentic.
William Roger
The
sat in parliament for the burgh of Ayr 1593. other coat given in this MS. is that which has been borne
various persons of the
name without
granted, with a in in to William merchant ence, 1838 Glasgow. Rodger, sanction,
till
by
differ-
WORKMAN'S A
Douglas.
MS.
137
pen and ink sketch of the arms of the Lochleven " Ut vita sic mors;" letters family, with a crescent in base; motto S. G. D., evidently Sir George of Helenhill, who aided Queen Mary to from Lochleven. escape *Carvod. Garwood of that Ilk, co. Lanark. Margaret Garwood was of the household of Queen Mary, who bequeathed some of her jewels to she nth of Stuart her; married, February 1567, John Tullypowries. these 45. Skrymyscor of Dauchop. L., bearings are on the seal, A.D. 1444, of John Scrymgour, with a lion's gamb holding a sword for
—
crest.
In 1298 William Wallace granted a charter to Alexander dictus Skirmischur of lands in Dundee, and of the constabulary of the castle, for his services as standard-bearer.
The
office
parliament, as property,
The
was
of constable
was
hereditary,
and
in
of his descendants did later. erected into a barony 1527.
many
ended
direct line of the family
holder sat in Dudhope, the family
1484
its
Earl of Dundee, and Viscount Dudhope, who died 1668, when the office of heritable standardbearer was granted to Gharles Maitland of Hatton, and has descended to the Earl of Lauderdale. It was granted by charter of Robert I. to Nicoll in John,
Skyrmieschour.
The Scrymgeours
of Gartmoir and Bowhill in Fife, although they used the same crest, bore a different coat gules, two swords in saltire points downward argent, hilted and pomelled or, in base a sinister hand
—
couped pointing downwards proper.
Ramsay of Kulluthie. charges mascles
;
L.,
See Plate 112. the boar's head
is
or and the other
this quarter is for Kinloch.
William Ramsay of Golluthie became Earl of Fife by marriage with the Gountess Isabella, ante 1357. The heiress of Golluthie married David Garnegie of Panbride c. 1560.
The
seal of
William, Earl of Fife, has an eagle displayed surmounted
of a bendlet engrailed.
Ogilby of Finlater.
First and fourth, argent, an eagle- dissecond and third, argent, a lion passant gardant gules. Garnegy of Kinayrd. L., the field or and the eagle beaked and
played sable
;
membered
gules; the older coat Garnegies, Earls of Southesk," private circulation. The family take their
See
"
History of the by William Eraser, 1867. Printed for
is
given Plate
1 1 1.
name from
the lands of Garnegie, co. Forfar, till 17 16; they were erected into a
held by them from an early period
barony 1663.
Duthac de Garnegy acquired part of Kinnaird 1401 by wadset, and 1409 had a Grown charter. Kinnaird was erected into a barony 1542. David Garnegie of Golluthie sat in parliament 1585.
—
in
Seal of John Garnegie of Kinnaird, 1479-89 an eagle standing on a the same were borne on the seals of Sir barrel, in chief two mullets ;
2
M
WORKMAN'S
138
MS.
Roberf Carnegie of Kinnaird 1551, and of Katherine Carnegie 1580, In 1 59 1, the eagle with a covered cup on its breast, as in Sir David Lyndsay's MS., is on the seal of Sir John Carnegie of Kinnaird. The barrel was evidently allusive to the tenure of Kinnaird of the
Crown
"
for the serwise of the
kepeing of the Kyngis ale
sellar within the
Schirefdome of Forfare." This tenure was altered in 1667, and Kinnaird is still the property of the representative of the family, the Earl of Southesk. The field is given or by Forman, and in all the entries in the Lyon Register, but nearly all the manuscripts have it argent.
MuMCREiF OF YT
Ilk. L., the field is or. Sir John de Moncref did homage to Edward I. at Perth 1296, and two others of his family took the oaths the same year. In 1456 Malcolm of Moncreiff was a Lord Auditor, and the lairds of
Moncreiff sat in parliament 1596, and frequently later. Sir John, second baronet, sold the barony of Moncreiff to the ancestor of the present proprietor, Thomas Moncreiff, clerk of exchequer, who had
a Crown charter 24th May 1667. The baronetcy and representation vest
in the Rev. Sir
Henry Well-
wood-Moncreiff, Bart., elder brother of Lord Moncreiff.
The arms were registered in 1673 by Sir John of that supporters two men armed cap-k-pied, bearing pikes on
—
Ilk, Bart.,
with
their shoulders
proper; and again in 1771, quarterly with Wellwood, by Sir Harry Moncreiff-Wellwood, Bart. Martyne of Medop. L., the chevron between three crescents are. on the seal of Mr Andrew Martyn, Canon of Aberdeen a.d. 1481, with an eagle's
head for crest
(?).
George Martin, bailie of Edinburgh in 1497, uses the same, with a lozenge on the chevron, and as crest a demi-eagle. Three persons of the name registered these arms with differences 1672-78, one of them being a descendant of Medhope, and another from the family which possessed Gibliston, co. Fife, from about 1500 to 1670.
Henry Martin was a member of the committee for dooms 1469 Andrew sat in parliament for Anstruther-Easter 1641-46; Robert, clerk of justiciary, was forfeited for high treason 1685, but restored after the revolution and Thomas was keeper of the Privy Seal at the Union. ;
;
John Mairtine, burgess of Edinburgh, had two charters from David II. William Martin was custumar of Edinburgh 1329-32. Above the shield is sketched a boar's head erased, 46. *Harratt. as crest. The arms differ from those of Heriot, and the name apparently may have been a local one taken from Harwood, co. Roxburgh. Henry Herwart witnesses two charters to the monks of Dryburgh ;
c.
1330.
In 1454 William Harwode, a churchman, menta de Metros.
—
is
named
in the
Muni-
Keith of Craig. A sketch in ink first and fourth, a lion passant gardant placed upon an embattled base second and third, Keith. ;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
139
—
The arms argent, on the second
registered, 1692, by Major Robert Keith of Craig were a chief embattled gules three pallets or, a bordure embattled of
is plain in the quartered coat registered 1769 by the of the Robert Keith, envoy to the Empress of family, representative Russia, to whom supporters were granted by Royal warrant. The lion might have been brought in by the marriage of Robert of ;
the chief
Craig to Agnes Ogilvie "
47.
Enoch
c.
Menzies of yt
1530. Ilk.
The
last
two words scored out and
"
written after in a different hand, L. Robert de Maneriis, in 1232, witnessed a charter of Alexander IL; and in 1248 sat in curia regis. Robert de Meyners, 1250, witnessed a charter of Alexander III., to whom he was councillor and guardian. The barony of Enoch is in Dumfriesshire, and remained in the pos-
Weem
session of the family till 1704. in Perthshire became, however, the seat of the head of the family, which latterly has been styled of that Ilk. James of that Ilk was in parliament 1560. Robert I. granted the barony of Durrisdeer in Dumfriesshire to Sir
Alexander de Meyners and Egidia Stewart, his wife. The arras registered 1672-78 by Sir Alexander Menzies of that Ilk, Bart., are argent, a chief gules, and in 1734 supporters were granted to his heir Sir Robert two savages wreathed about the head and middle with laurel. What appears to be the older coat with the field ermine was allowed, 1672-78, to Gilbert Menzies of Pitfoddels, near Aberdeen, with two greyhounds argent collared gules as supporters. Thomas de Meineris, who signed the barons' letter in 1320, sealed with a chief indented, and in 1431 the bearing on the seal of Sir David Meneris seems to be a chief fretty. Similarity of name and arms point to a common origin for the Menzies in Scotland and the Manners of Etal in Northumberland, represented by the Duke of Rutland, who at first bore or, two bars azure a
—
—
—
chief gules.
Robert de Meygneris was sheriff of Edinburgh 1328, and the high office of Great Chamberlain was held by Sir Robert of Meyners 1249-51 he died in. 1266. DuRY OF YT Ilk. L., azure, a chevron between three crescents Two branches of this family recorded arms 1672-78, and in argent. both cases the blazon is azure, a chevron argent between three crescents or, with a suitable difference for the cadet. Captain George Durie seems to be recognised as head of the family, as he has the chief coat. In the MS. an eagle's head erased is sketched at the side of the shield, and may be meant for the crest. An old carving in stone of the arms has two savages wreathed with laurel as supporters. Andrew Durie, Abbot of Melrose 1527, Bishop of Galloway 1541, died 1558. George Durie, Archdeacon of St Andrews, was Abbot or Commendator of Dunfermline 1530-63, and in the latter year is a party to a tack of the office of bailie of the regality of Dunfermline to David Durie of that ;
—
Ilk.
WORKMAN'S
I40
MS,
Sir Malise de Douery lived in the reign of Robert I. Janet, daughter and heir of Robert Durie of that Ilk,
is
said to have
been forced by James V. to marry his favourite, Henry Kemp of Thomastheir grandson sold Durie about 1612. toun, who assumed her name WoD OF Blartoun. L., Blairtoun is in Aberdeenshire, and be;
Woods
of Fettercairn and Balbegno, hereditary ushers of the king's chamber from the reign of James III. These bearings, with a cross crosslet fitch^e in chief, appear on seals of 1527-28. WiSHETT OF Pettarro. L., or, three piles gules. The motto, " Mercy I desyre," and two horses as supporters, are "added. " Life of George Wishart contains a genearecently published logy of this family, the best that has appeared. John Wischard was sheriff of Mearns before 1238.
longed to the
A
William was Bishop of Glasgow and afterwards of St Andrews 1270-78, and had been Chancellor of Scotland. Sir John Wischard, and three others of the name connected with the ^hires of Kincardine and Forfar, took the oath, a.d. 1296, to Edward I. Pittarrow was the designation of the family before the end of the fourteenth century, and the laird sat in parliament 1471. James of Pittarrow was Justice-Clerk 1513, and Sir John was Comptroller 1562, both sitting in parliament.
The
James sold Pittarrow in 1631. of the representative family. Colonel George Wishart of Cliftoncreated a baronet 1707, with an unusual remainder, in terms of
was which the title vests in the eldest son of the late Lady Clinton. William Thomas Wishart of Foxhall, in 1769, established his right to the chief arms of the family. Argent, three piles in point gules crest z. demihall,
motto — " Mercy
eagle, wings expanded proper; — two horses argent, saddled and bridled gules.
;
is
my
—
desire;" supporters
A
branch of the family seated at Logic from an early period, produced Robert, Bishop of Glasgow 1272-1316, and John Wishart was also bishop there; and they called their lands Logic-Wishart, and had a crown charter of erection of the barony of Wishart 1540, which gave them the style of that Ilk.
The arms
registered
by John of Logie-Wishart, or that
describe the piles as passion nails distilling drops of blood. seal, 1463, gives three piles and a canton. family of the same name, but of doubtful descent, acquired Logic late in the seventeenth century, and held it for several generations to it belonged George, Bishop of Edinburgh, and Captain Patrick Wishart, Ilk,
A A
;
both of
whom
registered arms.
LuvELL OF Banluby.
L., the piles are longer
and are surmounted
of a barrulet wavy. detached seal of Richard Lovel bears, crusilly a lion rampant. Henry of Balumbie, 1568, has the three piles surmounted of as many barrulets wavy, but in 1557 his son and heir apparent, John, uses the piles in point, and over them two barrulets wavy.
A
The Lovels were dale, but
lords of the barony of Hawick and part of Eskby forfeiture in the reign of David II. it was
lost these estates
;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
141
to this family that Richard Lovel, whose seal is described above, belonged. Henry Lovel, their ancestor, lived in the time of William the Lion.
Richard was summoned to the English parliament as a baron 1348, and the coat he bore was or, semde of cross crosslets a lion rampant azure. In 1267 Thomas of Lovel witnessed a charter to the Maison Dieu of Brechin. Ballumbiewas alienated about 1570. James Lovel represented
—
Dundee
in parliament 1568.
ScHEELL.
The
coat given by Sir D. Lyndsay for Rowll, bend inIn 1296 four persons of the name of Roule, belonging to Roxvecked. burghshire, swore fealty to Edward I. Roger de Rwle was killed in 1268. Nisbet gives some notes on the name. The Rules of Peilwalls, co.
Berwick, ended in coheirs about 1665. Mr William Fowler, rector of Hawick 1587, was 48. *FouLER. secretary and master of requests to Queen Anne, Consort of James VI. and I., and in 161 1 had a grant of the manor of Moyglasse in Ulster, which he sold in 161 5 his sister was mother of William Drummond of Hawthornden, the poet, and he seems to have been of a family of merchant ;
burgesses of Edinburgh. The Secretary left a son and heir, Captain Ludovick, who inherited Deanhouse and other lands in the barony of Restalrig, which passed by marriage with his daughter to George Logan of Burncastle. somewhat fabulous birthbrief was issued in 1759 to LieutenantColonel John Fouller, styled of Foullertoun, co. Edinburgh, tracing his descent through John Fouller, called son of the Queen's Secretary, to John, Dean of Guild of Edinburgh, in the reign of James III. It has been alleged that the family of Buchan 49. *Bauchquhane. descended from a younger son of an Earl of Buchan, and retained the garb as their bearing, which theory does not agree with the facts. 1 207-28 Richard de Buchan, clerk of the Bishopric of Aberdeen 1 29 1 Mr Thomas de Boughan, burgess of St John's town, swore fealty to Edward I.; and in 1296 Thomas de Boghan, of the county of Edinburgh, also took the oaths the seal of the latter has a flower-like ornament not on a shield. 1358 John de Buchan is named in the Exchequer Rolls, and in 1 39 1 Walter de Bochane was Archdeacon of Shetland. David II. grants a charter of the lands of Rotherstoun and fishings
A
;
;
which had belonged to John Buchan. Andrew de Buchan, scutifer, witness to a charter of Sir Alexander Forbes of that Ilk in 1436, is probably the Andrew who, in 1445, was owner of the estate of Auchmacoy, still held by the family.
in the Dee,
The
shield here represented
the oldest authority for the arms. lion's head erased azure, and in an addiis
Sir James Balfour has —argent, a tion Font's MS., made probably Buchan of Auchmacoy— three to
for
after the Restoration, there is
or,
lions'
given heads erased sable langued
The first appearance of the garb is in the Lyon Register 1694, gules. for Colonel John, a younger son of Auchmacoy argent, a garb azure banded or between three lions' heads erased sable langued gules, a bor-
—
dure embattled of the second. 2
N
WORKMAN'S
142
MS.
John, advocate, descended of Auchmacoy, in 1720 is allowed to increase the armorial evidence for descent from the Earls of Buchan, by a grant of— azure, a lion's head erased between three garbs, all within a bordure or. It was not till 1830 that the coat of the head of the house was registered, by James of Auchmacoy, when the garbs are allowed no place Hamilton argent, three lions' heads erased sable langued gules, quartering of Bargeny supporters a heron with an eel in its beak proper, which resembles the supporters of Stewart, Earl of Buchan, and an antelope argent collared gules, the collar charged with three cinquefoils ermine, being one of the supporters of Lord Bargeny. •Chapmane. These bearings are on the seal of David Chepman, appended to a deed, 1480, in the Colstoun charter chest. The name appears among the burgesses of note, who were burgh magistrates of Aberdeen, Lanark, Stirling, Perth, Haddington, and other
—
—
;
places during the fourteenth century.
William was provost and custumar of Aberdeen 1330 and Duncan, burgess of Aberdeen, had a charter of Rotherstoun on the Dee from David n. Simon, burgess of Lanark 1359, bailie 1369, in 1364 had a wadset of the lands of Baads and Brierybanks from John Livingstone of Drumry, of which David H. granted a charter of confirmation, 22nd August of the ;
thirty-eighth year of his reign. charter of confirmation of Robert H., of lands in the burghs of Stirling and Dumbarton, and in the city of Glasgow, in favour of John
A
name from the occupation of a and trader, personal temporary use, as it narrates that the properties had been disponed to him by his father Gregory, called Chepman. Palmer, clearly indicates the origin of the
and
in
The name
some
cases
its
associated with the introduction of printing into Scotland in 1507 James IV. granted a licence to Walter Chepman and Andrew Myllar to print the Acts of Parliament and Service books, &c. They are both designed burgesses of Edinburgh, but Chepman was a writer to the signet, one of the clerks of the King's Secretary, and prois
;
prietor of Everland, in the barony of Cramond-regis, from his designation. He had a charter of Kingsmeadow in
which he took
Cramond, 8th
December
1526. charter of foundation of a chaplainry in the Church of St Giles', Edinburgh, by him, 26th August 1513, supplies the names of his deceased
A
Marion Kerketill, and of Agnes Cockburn, then his spouse another deed of the same nature, 12th August 1528, was witnessed by his nephew, wife,
Mr John Chepman, who was
;
a burgess, writer to the signet, and proprie-
David Chepman, and William Chepman. The probably son of the granter, and identical with William Chepman, notary and writer to the signet, who, in 1541, presented Thomas Scone to the chaplainry founded by Walter. Walter, whose name I have not met with before 1496, was dead 20th
tor of the lands of Schelis; last is
WORKMAN'S
MS.
143
November 1537, when his nephew, Mr John, granted a similar charter to the Church of St Giles', in which his wife, Isobel Henderson, is named, and David, Thomas, and Robert Chepman are witnesses. He seems to have hoped to found a family, as he reserves the patronage of the chaplainry to himself, the heirs male of his body, his heirs male whomsoever bearing the name of Chepman, his eldest heir female, &c., the chaplain to be one of his own name, if any should be found fit if not, a relative not bearing the name to be preferred to a stranger. ;
Hendersoun "of
—
Fordell, a baron," is added; also the crest a hand " Sola virtus nobiholding a mullet surmounted of a crescent ; motto two martins; the arms differ from those in L., litat ;" supporters
—
—
the crescent being vert, and the charges being three piles issuing from the dexter side of the shield. The arms of this family have never been recorded. Porteus gives the crest as a star or issuing from a crescent
and
calls the
supporters mertriks proper. of Mr James Henrison, who acquired part of Fordel seal, 1497, 151 1, has three piles issuing from the sinister side, and a chief ermine In the MSS. and funeral escutcheons the variacharged with a crescent. tions in this coat are very numerous, James, first of Fordel, was King's Advocate 1494, Justice-Clerk 1507, argent,
The
and perished at Flodden he is stated to have been of a Dumfriesshire family, and in that quarter we find William Henryson, Chamberlain of Lochmaben Castle 1372-76. Fordel remains the prosat in parliament,
;
perty of the heir general of the Hendersons. Edward Henryson was a Lord of Session 1566, and father of Sir Thomas Henryson or Henderson of Chesters, who sat on the bench of that court 1622-38.
*Makgill. These bearings are on the seal, 1569, of Mr Thomas Machill, Canon of Dunkeld and, with the addition of a mullet for difference, on that of Helen Magil, wife of Simon Currie, 1588. James Macgill, Provost of Edinburgh 1570-72, was father of Sir James, Lord Clerk Register 1554, and of David of Nisbett and Cranstounriddell. King's Advocate and Lord of Session 1582, who died 1596, David, his son, was also a judge, and father of James, afterwards Viscount Oxfurd, who was raised to the bench 1629, Mr Robert Macgill of Foord was a Lord of Session 1649. The arms registered 1678 by Robert Viscount Oxford are those here " " Sine fine; supporters represented. Crest a phoenix proper; motto a horse at liberty argent, maned and hoofed or, gorged with a viscount's coronet, thereto a chain affixed, also or, and a bull sable colla^red and chained or. David Macgill of Rankeillour registered the same arms " " In dotnino confido; 1672-78, with a martlet argent for crest motto and in 1771 Arthur Macgill of Kemback, co. Fife, as heir male of both families, was allowed the arms, crest, and motto of Rankeillour, with the His descendant possesses Kemsupporters, the horse being collared or. back, and represents the family. *Adamson. The crest a crescent or or gules, and motto " Virtute ;
—
—
—
;
—
—
—
WORKMAN'S
144
MS.
The arms are on the seal of John Adamson, crescit" are added. appended to a charter 1529. The family were considerable burgesses of Edinburgh at this time, and William acquired Craigcrook, in the parish of Cramond, 1542, which was held by
A younger branch held and a bordure gules for added the parish of Prestonpans,
his descendants
Cowthropple, in
the Restoration.
till
difference.
The Adamson coat was, in 1765, allowed to John Adam of Maryburgh, who does not appear to be a descendant. Arms entirely different had been granted
in
family of architects
— 1756a vert,
William
Adam
of Maryburgh, one of a Corinthian column with capital and base in
to
—
pale proper between two cross crosslets fitchde in fess or; crest the " Divino Palladis arte" original of a Corinthian column proper motto William and John Adamson of Edinburgh sat in parliament frequently from 1504 to 1571, the former being Depute-Marischal Henry and James represented the burgh of Perth 1581-1617, and George sat for ;
—
;
Dunbar 1640-50; Mr John was
principal of the College of
Edinburgh of St Andrews and Patrick, Archbishop 1576-91 John Adamson 1623, was Prior Provincial of the preaching Friars in Scotland 1519. *Trollop, probably the same name as Troup, which is local in BanffHamelin de Troupe was among those accused of high treason in shire. August 1320 at Scone; he was sheriff of Banff 1328. ;
A
family of the
name possessed
Balnecraig, co. Aberdeen, for several seventeenth century. generations from I. of the lands of Forteviot, had Robert a charter John Trollop CO. Perth, and David II. granted those of Glenapp in Ayrshire to John till
late in the
Troupe. Richard Trolhope, claviger, and Katherine Ker, his spouse, had a charter in 1564 of lands in Newbottle. It is a coincidence worth noting that the family of Trollope, in the north of England, bore stags as their arms at an early date. 50. Hay of Mury. Added in ink, with the initials J. H., probably Sir John, who died in 1703 a woolpack between three inescutcheons.
—
Haye of Bowme. L. Haye of Leys. L. 51.
*EcFURD, a
local
name taken from Eckford near
Kelso.
Alexander de Hecford witnessed a charter of Alan, son of Roland, to the Abbey of Kelso a.d. 1206. Richard le fiz Geffrey de Ekford, of the co. Roxburgh, did homage to
Lord of Galloway, and Constable
Edward I. 1296. *Sleuman. This name became
altered to Slowane, or Aslowane, or
Sloane, and a family of Slowane possessed Garroch, in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright. Sir Hans Sloane bore arms founded on this coat. *Criche. *Bard. Sir James Balfour gives argent, a tiger passant regardant proper and in another place adds gazing in a mirror. William Baird of Auchmedden left a MS. genealogy of his family, dated 1770, which has been published in 1857, ^"d again in 1870. ;
—
—
WORKMAN'S The
seal of
MS.
145
Andrew Baird
of Laverocklaw, 1533, has a fess between three mullets in chief, and a bear (?) statant in base. That of George of Ordinhnivas has the mullets on the fess, and a boar statant in base, ante 1557, while his son Walter placed them in chief. Sir James of Auchmedden registered 1672-78 gules, a boar passant or. Posso in Peeblesshire passed by marriage to the family of Naesmyth
—
;
and, 1672-78, James See L. R.
Naesmyth
of Posso registered arms, quartering Baird.
Thomas
acquired Ordinhnivas in marriage with Janet Maitland proabout 1480, and his descendant, Lilias, heiress of Ordinhnivas, bably married, in 1578, Gilbert Baird of Auchmedden. The heir general is Francis Garden Fraser of Findrack, co. Aberdeen Alexander Baird, resident in New Zealand, is heir male of the older family, while Sir James Gardiner Baird, Bart., appears to be heir ;
male of Auchmedden. Richard Bard made a grant to the house of St Machutus c. 1240. In 1296 Duncan Bard of Stirlingshire, Fergus de Bard, John and Nicol Bard, all of the co. Lanark, swore fealty to Edward I.
Andrew Baird sat in parliament for Banff 1633-40. Chirnsyde (?). A coat much obliterated, apparently
argent, three
mens' heads erased proper banded. *Alane. Sir James Balfour gives parted per bend indented argent and gules, a crescent counterchanged. Porteus says a crescent and star In the Lyon Register, from 1672 onwards, coats counterchanged. founded on this are met with. 1490, Henry Alane was Clerk of Accounts of the King's Household. 1498, Henry Alane, Archdeacon of Dunblane. In July 1572, Robert Allane of Corsfurd, co. Lanark, was one of the persons charged with being art and part in the murder of King Henry and the two Regents the family remained in possession of Corsfurd
—
;
and Holmfoot for several generations. " Historical Records L. Colonel Leslie's 52. Leslie of Glesche. of the family" contain no notice of this branch. Hay of Fudye. L. *Pattoun. Added in ink, a fleur-de-lis between three crescents. Porteus makes the field azure and the charges argent.
Mr Roger
Pattone of Ferrochie, co. Aberdeen, ancestor of the existing of Paton of Grandholm, registered 1672-78 azure, three crescents family argent and at the same time Mr Alexander of Kinaldie entered the same, with a sword in pale in the centre.
—
;
James Paton of Middle
Ballilisk, co. Perth,
Bishop of Dunkeld 1571,
died 1596.
Hay
of Dalgatie. Argent, a fraise azure between three inescutch" eons gules Sir Alexander motto Subjugo ;" initials, D. A. H. of of Sir was father William, who was Hay Dalgatie, co. Aberdeen, ;
—
executed in 1650. After the Restoration orders were given that his body, bones, and 2
o
WORKMAN'S
146
MS,
head, along with those of the Marquess of Montrose, be gathered and honourably buried at His Majesty's expense. To this family belonged William, Bishop of Moray 1688, who left a
daughter and
wife of John Cuthbert of Castlehill. L., Nomianvell sable, on a bend argent 53. NoRVELL OF YT Ilk. field. of de of the Seal martlets three Normanvill, c. 1220 three John birds; of Walran de Normanvill, a.d. 1250 a bird and a chief charged heir, Jean,
—
—
—
The arms
with two birds.
for the family of Norvell of argent cottised or three
registered 1682, — on a bend Linlithgow, are
Boghall, CO. martlets azure.
sable,
George Norvell of Boghall married his cousin Marjory, daughter of David Lord Falconer, and left a daughter and heir, who married Captain Swindell their son, who assumed his mother's name, ;
sold the estate.
de Normanville sat tn curia regis 1208; 1259, Thomas de Normanville, present at an inquest, and owner of Padevinan, co. Lanark, had been removed from the King's Council in 1255. Robert did homage, 1371, to Robert H., and in 1296 no less than four members of this family, one of them a knight, swore fealty to Edward L William Norvel represented Stirling in parliament 1568-86. The Normanvilles of Gargunnock ended in an heiress, Marion, who married Hepburn, and had issue her seal, 1491, has three martlets on a fess. Sir Robert was Sheriff of Stirling 1391, and probably father of John of
Hugh
;
Gargunnock
1408.
Norvel, lady of Cardonald, widow of William Stewart of Castlemilk, in 151 1 seals with three martlets, two and one. Douglas of Kilspinny. The chief coat of Douglas, with the heart Isobel
uncrowned.
Levinstoun of Manerstoun. L. TuRNOUR. The arms obliterated. Lindsay of Covintoun. L., a baronial and knightly family
seated
from before 1366
till the end of the sevenof of seal, 1519, John Covington makes the fess countercompony, and has the addition of a mullet in sinister chief. Mure of Rowallane. L., the mullets argent, " supported be two
at Covington, co. Lanark,
teenth century;
The
moors," added in a different hand. The seals of Richard and William Mure, appended to their deeds of homage to Edward L, are not armorial, but that of William More, Lord of Abercorn 1357, has a fess charged with three mullets, and for supporters two savages. Sir William of Rowallan registered, 1672-78, the coat as in L,, with a savage's head for crest, the motto, Durum patientia frango^'' and for Sir Percy Cunningham Fairlie, supporters, two blackamoors proper. is heir of of ancient line this Bart., family, but the estates have passed under a special limitation in an entail to the Earl of Loudoun. The direct male line became extinct in 1700. An account of the family, compiled about 1657 by Sir William Mure of Rowallane, was ''
published in 1825.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Adam of Rowallane, II. John of Rowallane sat in parliament 1560.
Robert
was
first
wife of
;
54. Stirling of Cawder. Callender of yt Ilk.
Sir
147
Aiwyn was
L. L.,
Malcolm was thane of Callendar 1238.
also thane.
1282, Richard was Constable of Stirling Castle. In 1296 Sir John and Alwyn swore fealty to Edward I. Patrick de Callender left a daughter and heir, Christian, who married William de Livingstone, and they had charters from David II. of Callender and Kilsyth, which gave titles of peerage to their descendants and remained in their possession till lost by forfeiture in 17 16.
Patrick was
Abbot of Cambuskenneth
in
the early part of the
fifteenth century.
Ludovick Callender of Dorrater,
co. Stirling, an estate which had been in possession of his ancestors at least from 1480, died in 1695, and was
succeeded by his grandson, Ludovick Wilson, who assumed the surname. The principal family of the name is said by Nisbet to have been Callender of Mainers, traceable to the beginning of the sixteenth century, from which descended John, resident in Kincardine, who registered arms 1672-78 sable, a bend checquy argent and gules between six billets of the second. Walter, a younger son of Mainers, had a charter of Bordy 1585. It is probably from this line that the Callenders of Bothkennar descended, of whom was Sir John Callander of Westertown, Bart., 1798-1812, whose heir general is the present Henry Callander of Prestonhall, Westertown, Elphinstone, Crichton, &c. John Callander, blacksmith and locksmith to James VI., was ancestor of John who acquired Craigforth, co. Stirling, about 1685; his descendant, John of Craigforth, advocate, registered arms 1764 sable, a bend checquy or and gules between three billets of the second, and is represented by George Frederick William Callander of Craigforth, and of
—
—
Ardkinglas in Argyllshire. Ilk. L., Adam de Glendonwyn is stated in a of lands charter to have had Roxburghshire from John Macgill of that Ilk (Maxwell is probably the name, there were no Macgills of that Ilk) in the reign of Alexander III. 55.
Glendonwyng of yt
Adam
of Roxburghshire was forfeited by David II. Matthew, Bishop of Glasgow, died 1408. Sir Symon sat in parliament 1469. Bartholomew, Sheriff of Dumfriesshire, who was killed by
Lindsay of Wauchope before 1505, seems to have been the last styled of that Ilk, but the printed pedigrees of this family are unsatisfactory. His brother Ninian was of Parton, in the stewartry of Kircudbright, 1512 and in 1587 the Glendinnings are named as one of the unruly clans on the West March. ;
Agnes, heiress of Parton, married James Murray, who assumed her surname their son, Robert Glendoning of Parton, took the additional surname of Neilson, having married Mary, daughter and heir of Robert ;
WORKMAN'S
148
MS.
Neilson of Barncalzie, and their second son and eventual heir assumed the designation of William Glendonwyn of Glendonwyn. He left three daughters i. Mary Lady Gordon of Letterfourie 2. Xaveria Basilia of Parton, died unmarried 1858, having settled the
—
;
property on her nephew, Frederick James Scott, who assumed the surname of Glendonwyn Parton has been sold, but Sir Robert Glendonwyn Gordon, Bart., is heir general of the family, and has still the estate of
—
Cowgarth
in the stewartry
The arms
of
;
3.
Ismene Magdalene (Mrs
Glendonwyn have never been
Scott), left issue.
registered.
Nisbet
describes a coat cut in Parton church, with the date 1598, as having the cross as here represented, with a goat's head in the first quarter, a sword bend sinister ways in the second, a boar's head in the third, and a fess
—
checquy in the fourth supporters were carried a knight with a lance, and an angel holding a twig of laurel. Cheseme of yt Ilk. L., an old family, taking its surname from the In 1296 Richard de Cheseholme of lands of Chisholme, co. Roxburgh. that county, and John de Chesolm of Berwickshire, swore fealty to Edward I. In 1853 John Scott-Chisholme of Stirches and Whitehaugh, the representative of the family, registered arms gules, a boar's head and neck couped argent, quartering Scott, and was allowed supporters two knights in armour, the one resting on a shield of the arms of Chisholme, the other holding a lance with a pennon of the same arms. In the fourteenth century a member of this family settled in the north, and by marriage with Margaret del Ard acquired extensive lands in Inverness and Ross-shire. Weyland Chisholm had his lands of Comer, in Strathglass, erected Alexander of Comer registered arms 1760 ^gules, a into a barony 1513. boar's head couped or langued azure supporters two savages wreathed and head middle with the and about laurel, holding oak batons over their all The Comer shoulders, proper. family latterly styled themselves of " The Chisholm." The seal of Sir Robert de Chesholme, that Ilk, or 1362, has a fess between three boars' heads couped and charged with as many cushions. That of Richard, a.d. 1292, has one boar's head couped contournde, and the same appears on the seal of William Chisholme of Muriel Chisholm, wife of Alexander Sutherland of Kinkell 1592. Dufifus, 1435, bore a boar's head erased and a chief, and her descendants sometimes carried Chisholme as a quartering, sometimes a boar's head erased composed into one coat with the Sutherland mullets and the cross Another eminent northern family, the Roses crosslets fitchde of Cheyne. a boar's head of Kilravock, carry couped gules between their three water bougets, to indicate descent from the marriage, in 1364, of Hugh de Ros and Janet, daughter and heir of Sir Robert Chesholme, governor of ;
—
;
Urquhart
—
—
—
Castle.
James and William, both Bishops of Dunblane, and holding the see from 1487 till 1564, carried a boar's head erased. Another William Chisholm succeeded as Bishop of Dunblane 1564. Glene of yt Ilk. L., Robert Glen married Margaret, natural
WORKMAN'S
MS.
149
daughter of Robert I. In 1328 a legacy left by the Queen is paid to Colban del Glen, who appears later as holding the multures of Estchel, probably Eshiels, near Peebles, and within a few miles of the lands of Glen, from which the family probably took their name. In 1332 Roger del Glen renders the accounts of the provosts of Peebles at Scone. John del Glan and Sarah of Glen swore fealty to Edward I. John Glen had a charter of Balmuto, co. Fife, from Robert I., which passed by marriage to the Boswells he and his wife, Margaret Bruce, had a charter of Nether Pittedie from David II. Alexander Glen was in parliament as sergeant 1545, and James, George, and Andrew Glen represented the burgh of Linlithgow frequently from 1625 till 1664. From this family probably descended the Glens of Longcroft, co. Linlithgow, whose heiress was Elizabeth, Countess of Dal;
housie.
*Pebillis of Dufarmling. Master John of Peebles was in parliament 1368, William of Peebles sat for that burgh in 1468, and Oliver Peebles for Perth 1572-96. In 1 291 Warin de Pebles, burgess of Berwick, took the oaths to Edward I. Sir Robert of Peebles, a churchman, was Great Chamberlain of Scotland 1327-29. William Peebles had lands in Forfarshire from David II. James de Paiblis de eodem acts as procurator, in 1437, ^or Alexander of the Weyndis. family of Peebles, designed of Chapelhill, and burgesses of Perth, held lands of the Abbot of Scone in the fifteenth century, and far on in
A
was probably
them
Mr
Alexander Peebles, advocate, belonged, who acquired Middleton, co. Edinburgh, and Skirling in Peeblesshire, and left an only child, Catherine, who married in 162 1 Sir John Hamilton of Trabroun, younger son of the first Earl the sixteenth.
It
to
that
—
coat given in Porteus' MS. for Pebeles is argent, sable between three papingoes vert membered gules ; a chevron engrailed that here represented probably was borne by Mr Alexander, and the cinque-
of Haddington.
foil
an
The
may have been
taken in
memory
of his mother, Isabel Balneaves,
heiress.
*ToMSOUN OF YT
Ilk.
Gourlabauk
is
added
in a different hand.
These were the bearings of Henry Thomson, Lyon King of Arms, 1504-12; he held the lands of Kellar, Farnyslaw, &c., in the barony of Dirleton, and d.s.p., leaving a widow, Christina Douglas, and a nephew and heir,
Thomsons
The
designation of that Ilk is complimentary, and the were one of the clans on the West March described as unruly
John Thomson. 1587-
The Thomsons of Gourlabanks, in East Lothian, ended in an heiress, Marion, who married James Millar, and was dead in- 1634, leaving a son, James Millar of Gourlabanks, who registered arms 1672-78, quartering for Thomson argent, a stag's head cabossed attired with ten tynes gules,
—
on a chief azure a cross
crosslet fitchde or
field.
2P
between two spur rowels of the
WORKMAN'S
ISO
MS.
The numerous Thomson
coats in Scotland are all founded on the bearthe most here ings represented conspicuous family of the name were the Thomsons who possessed Duddingstone, near Edinburgh, for five generations, till sold by Sir Patrick about 1668; his father had been created a baronet 1636. They bore argent, a stag's head cabossed gules attired ;
—
on a chief engrailed of the last a crescent between two mullets. Sir William Thomson, Town Clerk of Edinburgh, was knighted soon after the Restoration, and left issue. azure,
The
of Alexander, burgess of Edinburgh, gives a stag's head cabossed, and a chief charged with a crescent between two mullets. Sir James Balfour gives Thomson of Gourlabank with a cross crosslet and no spur rowels. seal, 1591,
*SCHEWALL OF YT IlK. 56. Ahterlonye of Kellye. there
is
a notice by
its
"
An
old Forfarshire family, of which then representative, John Ochterlony of Guynd,
Spottiswood Miscellany." Kelly, sometimes called was Ochterlony, acquired by marriage with a Stewart, hence the quarter1682, printed in the
genealogy she is said to have been a daughter of Stewart of Rosyth in Fife, but is not to be found in any account of that family, and was more probably heiress of the Stewarts of Kelly. Sir William sold Kelly in 1614, but his heirs remained seated at Guynd, which, on the death of John Ochterlony 1843, was inherited by his nephew, James Pierson. Sir Charles Ochterlony, baronet, calls his estate of Balmadies, which was purchased in 1830, Ochterlony. John Ochterlony of Guynd, and two of his kinsfolk, registered arms 1672-78, when the Stewart quartering was dropped (an arrangement which appears on a seal 1533), and the bordure charged with buckles composed with the paternal coat in all three cases the bordure is gules, although the field is azure. Guynd has four buckles and as many escallops ing
;
in the
;
alternately or.
Between 1226 and 1239 Walter, son of Turpin, exchanged the lands of Othirlony, which had belonged in heritage to his ancestors, for those of Kenny, belonging to the Abbey of Arbroath, and had a charter of them, which in 1351 was confirmed by the Abbot to his descendant, John de In 1296 Wautier de Doghterloueny swore fealty to Outhirlowny.
Edward
I.
John Ochterlony of Kelly, depute-marischal, sat in parliament 1526. There is added, or Culane of old, sometime an 57. *GuLANE. hearalde 1663. John Cullen was appointed Islay Herald 5th January 1661, and died in or before July 1667.
The
seal of
John Cullen of Knavane
151 7, has
—on a bend between
two boars' head couped a cinquefoil (? rose) between two buckles Knavane is in Aberdeenshire, and was acquired by Andrew Culane, burgess of Aberdeen, who had a charter a.d. 1440. Alexander was Provost of Aberdeen 1590, and represented the city in parliament 1597.
;
WORKMAN'S George Cullen
in
MS.
151
1652 was deputy from Aberdeen to the English
parliament. The coat recorded, 1763, by William Cullen of Saughs, M.D., Professor of Medicine in the University of Edinburgh, representer of a family of some antiquity in Lanarkshire, is azure, a close helmet argent (a maternal difference for Roberton) between two boars' heads erased in His son, Robert of Ormiston Hill, co. chief and a cinquefoil in base or. Edinburgh, an estate acquired by the father, was a senator of the College
—
A
of Justice 1796-18 10. younger branch possessed Parkhead, co. Lanark. In Linlithgowshire, John Gillon of Wallhouse, descended from a family who held these lands by grant 1572, from James, Lord of Torphichen, registered 1676 ^gules, on a saltire argent five martlets volant of the field and in 1824 his descendant, William Downe Gillon of Wallhouse, was allowed supporters two ravens proper. *GouRLAY. Sir D. Lyndsay and Sir J. Balfour give argent, three martlets gules, for Gourlay of Kincraig.
—
—
;
The
position of this family in the thirteenth century is shown by the fact, that the oaths to Edward L were taken in 1296 by no less than five in the county of Edinburgh, one in Roxburgh, eight of its members one in Berwick, and William de Gourlay of Bagally, co. Forfar.
—
Ingelram de Gourlay is said to have witnessed a charter of William the Lion Hugh, son and heir of the late Sir Hugh, confirms the gift made by his predecessor, Olyver, son of Kylvert, from his lands of Southhall ;
and Northhall, co. Haddington, to the monastery of Newbottle. These lands were granted in the reign of David H., on the
forfeiture
Gourlay of Beinston, to Adam Hepburn. In 1293 William, son William Gourlay, makes a gift to the same monastery. and It is stated that lands in Fife, including part of Kincraig, were acquired by the marriage of John Gourlay with a coheiress of Bickerton, but there seems no proof of this. In the fifth year of the reign of Robert IL, William de Gourlay, son and heir of Joanna de Erthe of Walchton, resigns the lands of Drem, inherited from her. Simon Gourlay had charters from David II. of the coronership of Alderston Fife, and of Adomstoun and Caprounflatts, co. Haddington. remained in possession of the family at the close of the fifteenth century at that time Lamelathen, near Dundee, was also the property of a Gourlay; of
Hugh
heir of the late
;
at a later period Gourlays of Dargo, co. Forfar, flourished. The name is found among persons of position in Dundee in the seventeenth century. Robert, Provost of Stirling 1330, seems to have left descendants there
and in Menteith, where they were landowners in the seventeenth century. But it is in Fife that the head of the family remained, seated at Kincraig, which was a free barony holding of the Crown Sir Thomas Gourlay of Kincraig registered arms 1672-78 sable, an eagle displayed argent armed and beaked gules and the same coat, with a difference, was allowed to James Gourlay, merchant in Dantzic.
—
;
;
WORKMAN'S MS. In 1865 supporters— two eagles argent armed and beaked gules — the Rev. William Austin-Gourlay of Kincraig. were granted found some MSS. —an eagle surmounted of a Another coat 152
to
in
is
bend gules charged with three crescents but this is the bearing of a branch of the Ramsays. *DuFF. In 1330 the Abbot of Arbroath confirmed to David dictus Duffus, son and heir of John, called Duffus, a charter of lands at Inver;
cullen.
In 1341 Brokynus Duff was on an inquest at Aberdeen, and the next year Machabeus Duff, burgess of Cullen, sat on another at Banff. In 1404 David Duff and Agnes de Camera, his wife, daughter and heir of Matilda de Maldavate, had a Crown charter of confirmation of the lands of Maldavate and Baldavy in Cullen, resigned by the said Matilda
and Agnes. In 1493 John Duff of Darbruche has a suit against Sir James Ogilvie of Deskford for disturbing his tenure of his lands of Fyndachtyfield, and carrying off his charters, when produced a charter of Robert
Andrew Duff became
surety for him, and I., granted the second year of his reign. Darbruche remained in the possession of the Duffs of Maldavate till 1627.
These are indications of the origin of the now widespread family of Duff, to which, in recent times, a descent from the Earls of Fife has been ascribed of this there is no proof, and the arms and locality afford no ;
support to the theory. In 1676 Alexander Duff of Keithmore, "lineally descended and now representer of the family of Craighead," registered arms vert, a fess dancetty ermine between a buck's head cabossed in chief and two escal" note is added Virtute et operaT lops in base or; no crest motto " There is good reason to believe that he is not the representer of Craighead." Craighead is said to descend from Muldavit. Alexander's eldest son, Alexander of Braco, who sat in parliament from 1689 till his death in 1705, is represented as heir general by the Right Hon. Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant-Duff of Eden, M.P. William Duff of Braco in 1723 registered the same arms with a hart's head proper for crest, and had a grant of supporters two savages wreathed about the head and middle with laurel, holding branches of trees
—
—
;
A
:
—
hands proper. His uncle and heir male, William, was father of the
in their
first
Fife.
Earl
—
Duff of Drummuir, co. Banff, according to a funeral escutcheon, bore a buck's head between three escallops crest a heart mottoes above the " Kind heart," and below the shield, "Be true and ye shall never rue." crest, Catherine, daughter and heir of Adam of Drummuir, married Alexander Duff, a cadet of Keithmore and their grandson, Archibald of Drummuir, in 1737 registered vert, on a fess dancetty argent three mullets gules, in chief a deer's head cabossed surmounted of a pheon, and in base a pheon point upwards between two escallops or; a canton of the second charged with ;
—
;
—
;
—
WORKMAN'S
MS.
153
This canton is the earliest heraldic indication of the claim to descent from the Earls of Fife. Supporters a savage holding a club, and a stag proper attired and chained or crest and mottoes
a lion rampant of the
third.
—
;
as above.
*DiKESOUN OF YAT
Ilk.
Rcsembles the coat given
in L. for
Dickson
of Ormiston, co. Peebles. The seal of Charles Decksoune, 1481, is a lion (?wehr wolf) passant and a chief charged with a crescent between two mullets. Isabel Dyxcoun, in 1527, has merely three mullets. Adam Dicson was Sheriff-Depute of Peebles 1388. The Dicksons of Winkstone, near Peebles, were a family of position the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
John sat in parliament for Peebles 1567-8, and another John 1612-17. John of Winkstone, Provost of Peebles, was assassinated there in 1572. in
a charter to Robert Dyckison of Hethonfields in the same county, and during the Duke of Albany's regency Malcolm Fleming of Biggar gave a wadset of Oliver Castle lands to Robert Dickson. The Dicksons of Smithfield, also close to Peebles, were seated there in the fifteenth century, if not earlier, and ended in an heiress, who married John Lord Hay of Yester as his second wife. Her son, John Hay of Smithfield, was the first of a separate branch of the Hays still represented in Peeblesshire by Sir Robert Hay, Bart., but Smithfield passed by marriage to James, twelfth Earl of Morton. The arms of the Smithfield Dicksons, as given in a funeral escutcheon of Hay, were ^argent, three mullets and a chief gules. In Berwickshire, Thomas Diksone of the Tour of Eccles, Patrick (called the laird), and others of the name, were charged with treason, along with the Duke of Albany, 1479. The Dicksons of Belchester, Bughtrig, and other families in that district, claim to descend from the Keiths, Earls Marischal, and this was sanctioned by three entries in the Lyon Register between 1672 and 1694 a chief charged with three pallets being added
Robert
III. granted
—
—
Dickson mullets. Leirmound of YAT Ilk. L., Learmonth of Dairsie, co. Fife. These arms are on various seals of the early part of the sixteenth century, and one of Sir James Learmonth of Balcomie has also a crest a hand holding a cornucopia. The name is derived from the lands of Learmonth in Berwickshire. Ersiltoun remained in the family till the close of the fifteenth century. In 1479 William of Leirmonth of Berwickshire was charged with treason. In Fife, Dairsie and Balcomie were the property of two branches of the Learmonths who attained to distinction James, afterwards Sir James of Balcomie, sat in parliament 1524 and frequently later, and was ambassador to England 1543; Sir John of Balcomie also had a seat in parliament, and Sir James was a Lord of Session in 1627. Patrick of Dairsie, and his descendants, sat in parliament almost regularly from 1560 till 1600.' The coat was registered 1672-78 by George Learmonth of Balcomie, representer of the family of Dairsie, quartered with azure, on a bend to the
—
;
—
2
Q
WORKMAN'S
154
MS,
Balcomie it has also been said to be for argent three roses gules, for Dairsie of that Ilk. Balcomie certainly gave a surname to a family who held it at an no trace of a marriage between them and the early period, but there is Learmonths, and an interval elapsed between the disappearance of the Balcomies and the acquisition of the estate by James Learmonth of Clatto ;
The
quartering remains unexplained, as there is no known marriage by which it could be introduced. Balcomie passed from the hands of the Learmonths in 1683, the last owner dying in 1696. The Learmonths of Dairsie held the office of bailie of the regality of St Andrews, north of the Forth, from early in the fifteenth century till 1606; and were also custumars and searchers of the port of St Andrews. The Russian family of Lermontoff claims descent from the Learmonths of in
1526.
Scotland.
*Ker. This, indistinctly written, has been quoted as Bog. It seems an early attempt to compose the two Ker coats, and failed to discover by what branch of the family it was borne.
The
I
have
perhaps be allowed to refer to his series of articles on the origin, descent, and arms of this powerful border clan contributed to " Herald and Genealogist," " Genealogist," and " Miscellanea Geneathe writer
may
logica et Heraldica."
Johannes Ker, venator apud Swynhope, near Peebles, c. 1190, is the first of the name found as yet in Scotland. Richard Ker held lands in Eliston, co. Roxburgh, in the reign of Alexander II., and Thomas Kaurr was Sheriff of that county in 1264. Mr Nicol, Henry, William, and Andrew swore fealty to Edward I. the was of Seal de Carr to David and in II., Keeper Privy John 1357 John Kerr, of the forest of Selkirk, had a charter of part of the lands of Auld-
tounburn, which gave a designation to his descendants for a hundred of Cessford. years, till they took that Andrew Kerr, the first styled of Cessford, was a Warden of the
Marches, and sat in parliament 1469 his younger son, Thomas, was of Fernyhirst in 1476, and founded that branch represented by the Marquess ;
of Lothian. Ker of Samuelston bore a unicorn salient, and unicorns' heads were taken by Cessford about the time that Samuelston passed with Nicholas to her husband, Alexander Lord Home, in 1497. apparently added in consequence of marriage with
Ker
The mascles were Elizabeth de St
Michael, an heiress, and it is probable that the Fernyhirst family added a stag's head in base to the chevron, charged with three mascles, about 1530, in consequence of the marriage of Sir Andrew Kerr with Margaret Colville, coheiress of her family although there was no issue of this alliance, the Kerrs retained Oxnam and other lands of the Colvilles. The ;
chevron charged with three mullets was first borne in a field azure, and this tincture was retained by the Carre de Luzancey in Brittany, descended from Robert Carre, who was in the military service of the King of France early in the sixteenth century. Probably before 1600 the
WORKMAN'S
MS,
155
Cessford family changed the field to vert, and Fernyhirst made it gules about the time that the stag's head in base, which was afterwards dropped, was added. The Kerrs at first held most of their lands of the Earls of Douglas ; can the mullets be allusive to this tenure ? L. 58. Stirling of Keir. in Fife *KiLGOUR. local name the place is near Falkland, 59. and in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries a family of Kilgour possessed Nuthill. *MoRESouN OF Darse or Prestongrang, 1643, is added. and treasurer of Edinburgh, who died in 1615, John Morison, bailie " " was called the rich he married Katherine Preston, daughter of the Lord President of the Court of Session, and had a large family. His Sir of co. father of was Sir Dairsie, Fife, John grandson, George of Dairsie this family made alliances by marriage with houses of rank. Mr Alexander, a younger son of the bailie, acquired Prestongrange in East Lothian 1628, and was a Senator of the College of Justice 1626. His son. Sir Alexander of Prestongrange, registered arms 1672-78 argent, three moors' heads couped proper. Henry, writer to the signet, a cadet of Dairsie, at the same time registered the coat with the three heads on one neck. The last of the Prestongrange family was George of
A
;
;
;
;
—
Little Chalfield, Wiltshire,
who
d.s.p.
1788, his heirs being Elizabeth,
Countess of Sutherland, and George, Earl of Glasgow. In 1673 George Morison of Bognie, co. Banff, founder of a family still existing, was granted arms almost identical with those in this MS. *HiLL. Colonel John Hill, who was concerned in the massacre of Glencoe, and Colonel Scipio Hill of Waughton, who was created a baronet of Scotland in 1707, were both Englishmen. The burgh of Queensferry was represented in parliament by Robert Hill 1643-49, and
by James Hill I08i.
A
small family, at least as early as 1450, possessed lands at Niddrie, in the county of Edinburgh, and had the designation of Hill of that Ilk ;
they were seated there after the middle of the seventeenth century. hill
or
mount
in their
arms was
The
vert.
Ninian
Hill, a citizen of Glasgow, acquired the lands of Lambhill and Garbraid, co. Lanark, by marriage with Helen, sister and coheir of George and Thomas Hutcheson, who founded the hospital in Glasgow which bears their name by deed dated i6th December 1639. Ninian Hill of Lambhill, son and heir of Ninian and Helen, in 1676 registered the arms here represented. Hugh Hill of Lambhill died 1737, leaving a daughter, Mary of Lambhill, who married Robert Graham of Kilmanan, and left issue. In 1819 Laurence Hill, writer in Glasgow, was served heir male of the family, and had a son and heir, Laurence Hill of Barleylawn, New Forest, Hants.
*Arneill. *CoKE. A surname which appears pretty early
in various parts of
WORKMAN'S
156
MS.
Robert I. grants Culmalow, in Aberdeenshire, to Alexander Michael Cook, in that county, is mentioned in a charter of David
Scotland.
Cook
;
II.
name seems
become that of an established family John Cook of Balcasky, and John and Richard Cook, both of Abercromby, are all witnesses to a charter of John de Dundemor to the Priory of the Isle of May in 1260, and Malcolm Cook gave a charter It is in the east of Fife that the
to have
;
to that house of his land of Cranebriggis.
James Cook represented Pittenweem in parliament 1649, ^'^d he or a namesake again in 1685-86. John Cook, bailie of Pittenweem, registered arms 1675 gules, on a bend or two cinquefoils azure, on a sinister
—
canton argent a crescent surmounted of a cross crosslet fitchfee of the His descendants possessed the estate of Newburn, and are well field. known as clergymen of the Church of Scotland and members of the legal The cinquefoils appear to have been taken from the coat of profession. seal in 160 1 has a plain cross, an English family of the same name. and another coat is given from this MS., having unmistakable reference
A
to cooking.
Gairdner.
Colonel Gardiner,
who was
killed at Prestonpans,
was
of a family seated at Torwoodhead, co. Stirling. 60. FoKARTTE. L., in 1458 Patrick Fokert was ambassador to the
King of Castile, and in 1467 Thomas sat in parliament for Edinburgh; he was dean of guild, and others of the name at later dates figure as magistrates of the capital. Henry, Abbot of Kelso, before 12 18 granted to Richard, son of Solph, the lands of Folcariston, in Lesmahago, co. Lanark, as held by his father
and ancestors.
Adam
de Folkarton, 1 240, was probably his son, and his descendants or Fokkarts of Fokkartoun, till the beginning of the as Folkerts figure sixteenth century, when Elizabeth, the heiress, was wife of James
Carmichael of Balmedie.
CUNYNGHAME OF BeLTOUNE.
L.
The pall charged with a mascle or. CuNYNGHAME OF CuNYNGHAMEHEiD. L., an old cadet CuNYNGHAME.
of Kilmaurs,
branching off at the beginning of the fifteenth century. William of Cunynghameheid sat in parliament 1560, and was father di David, Bishop of Aberdeen, whose seal 1599 ^^^ the arms here given, quartering two garbs to indicate descent from the marriage, in 1491, of Robert of Cunynghamehead, to Margaret Mure of Polkelly, an heiress of a family which quartered the garbs of Gumming supporters two conies. This family sometimes bore the shakefork between a mullet in chief then the shakefork for Mure, and two garbs gules in flank for Gumming in and alone, quartering Mure and Gumming; 1698 Sir William, third baronet, was allowed, Nisbet says, to carry first and fourth, the shakefork with a mullet in chief; second and third. Mure quartering Gumming; and On his death, in 1724, the title for supporters, a cony and a falcon proper.
—
;
;
—
WORKMAN'S became extinct and the estate was sold Hamiltons of Westport, were coheirs.
;
MS.
157
the Fullartons of Fullarton, and
An
attempt has been made to derive the Marquess of Conyngham from Alexander, younger brother of Sir William, the first baronet ; the dates render this impossible. Alexander, the settler in Ireland, was in 1611 a clergyman, with a cure the first baronet of Cunynghamhead was proved, in a suit as to his liability for debts incurred during his minority, to have been born in ;
November
1601.
William Alison, provost of Jedburgh, represented that burgh in parliament 1542-43, and Robert Alison in 1585. *LiTHCOW OF YAT Ilk. In K. this is given for Lithgow of DryRobert de Lythcw, notary public 1452, occurs in grange, near Melrose. the chartulary of Melrose, and in 1534 James Lithqw was a monk there. The name, which is of course one of locality, appears in the fourteenth century; John Lithcu 1329, and William de Lythcu witnessed a charter at Perth 1376; in 1341 Richard de Lythqu, clerk, was one of the custumars of Linlithgow. 61. *Alizon.
Towards the
close of the fifteenth century, persons of the
name
held
West Lothian. In 1582 Patrick Lithgow, attended parliament. sergeant, The estate of Drygrange seems to have been alienated by the Lithgows early in the eighteenth century, after two hundred years of the lands of Weltoun, in
possession.
Otterburn of Redhall.
L.,
a seal of
Mr John
Otterburn has
three otters' heads couped, and in 1524 Adam of Auldhame and Redhall, provost of Edinburgh, afterwards knighted, uses a chevron between three otters'
heads erased.
He was
King's Advocate, Ambassador to England, a Lord of Session, and a member of the Privy Council. Allan Otterburn was Nicholas Otterburn, clerk of the secretary to Murdoch, Duke of Albany. parliament 1458, and John, official of Edinburgh, 1467-69. Anna, daughter and heir of Sir Thomas of Redhall, in the parish of Colinton, married, in 1614, Sir James Hamilton of Innerwick, and' left descendants. The name is taken from Otterburn, in the parish of Morebattle, co. Roxburgh, and is met with there in 1455, and subsequently. rolls, sat in
Mr
Nicholas, vicar of St Giles' Church, Edinburgh, and secretary to James II., in 1478 founded masses to be sung there; Gilbert Otterburn of Suthek is one of the witnesses to the deed of gift. Thomas, brother
of
Mr
Nicholas,
left issue,
from
whom
Sir
Adam
probably descended.
CuNYNGHAME OF Glengarnock. L., of this old family Humphrey sat in parliament 1481, and John in 1560. William, fiar of Glengarnock, married Isobel, only child of Michael Scott of Inverteil, fiar of Balwearie; their son, Sir James, disposed of his Ayrshire estate, arranged in 16 15 his claim to inheritance through his mother, and settled in Ireland, where he had a grant of land. 2
R
WORKMAN'S
158
MS.
CuNYNGHAME OF PowMAis.
L., Alexander was in parliament 1481, six was and Robert knighted years after. The family retained their barony of Polmaise-Cunyngham till late in the seventeenth century. CuNYNGHAME OF Barnes. L., John having erected and maintained a lighthouse on the Isle of May, obtained a charter of his lands of Westbarns, Isle of May, and others erected de novo into the barony of Westbarnes, which was ratified 1645. Nicol C. had a charter of Barnes, co. Fife, in 1376, which remained
in the possession of his descendants till about 1740. 62. Kennedy of Bargany. L., the motto, added above the shield.
"In Gode
hope,"
is
The head of the powerful Ayrshire family to which the Marquess of Ailsa belongs. The seal of John of Dunure, in 137 1, has two lions as supporters. The Lords Kennedy bore two swans, and this family a lady and a wyvern, both proper, which, in 1837, were confirmed to Hew Fergusson Kennedy of Bermane and Finnarts, co. Ayr, the heir male of this baronial house, with the coat here given crest a fleur-de-lis issuing from two oak
—
—
;
"
Fuimus." was Gilbert alienated, and the elder line failed about 1640. Bargany Kennedy had a charter of Bennane 1367. *ScHiL. James Shiell, dempster, sat in parliament 1587, and Archibald Shiels represented the burgh of Peebles in the last Scottish leaves; motto
parliament. 63.
vant."
Cranstoun of yat A name taken from
Ilk.
L.,
motto added,
"
Yous vant
or
I
the property of the family in the county of
Edinburgh.
An
early seal of
Andrew de
Cranistoun, probably of the thirteenth that of William de Craniston, 1426, bears
century, has a crane passant three cranes the heads of the family bore supporters, a lady and a buck, before they were raised to the peerage in 1609. ;
;
Thomas de Cranystoun makes
a grant to the house of the Holy Trinity at Soltray before 1249, ^"^^ Aelured de Cranston occurs as a witness 1175-80. Sir William of that Ilk sat in parliament 1439 and afterwards, as did his successors frequently.
The
direct line ended in coheiresses, the eldest of whom, Sarah, before married, 1581, William, younger son of John Cranstoun of Moriston. William, third lord, sold Cranstoun. The title became dormant on
the death of Charles Frederick, eleventh lord, in 1869. If a descendant in the male line of the Moriston family exist, he is next heir. That family had subsisted for several generations before the interin 1669 Anna, wife of James marriage with the elder line Pringle of ;
was charged to enter heir of line of her father, Alexander of Morriston, and Lord Cranstoun to enter as heir male three years later the estate was apprised by Mr Mark Ker. Haltree,
;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
159
—
first
and
fourth, three
Nisbet says, the seal in 159 1, of John of Moriston, was quarterly, and fourth, three cranes second and third, three crosses pat^e. Douglas of Drumlanrig. L., the heart is not crowned. ;
The mullets
James of Drumlanrig,
seal of
1537,
is
—
first
second and third, a man's heart, and on a chief three crosses In 1545 he carried Douglas quartered with five crosslets fitchde). ;
patde (? cross crosslets fitchde, for Mar. There is a seal, 1627, of William of Drumlanrig, on which there is Mar first and fourth, Douglas second and third; the bordure is not shown in
any of
these.
James, Earl of Douglas and Mar, who Drumlanrig to his natural son, Sir William,
barony of Hawick,
was confirmed
co.
at Otterburn, granted
who had
a charter of the
Roxburgh, from Archibald, Earl of Douglas, which
in 1407.
James of Drumlanrig
many
fell
sat in parliament 1543 of his descendants sat as free barons.
Sir William berry, registered
and subsequently, and
was created a peer 1628 William, third Earl of Queensarms 1672-78, as given by Sir David Lyndsay that is,
—
;
Douglas with the heart crowned gules, quartering Mar, all within a bordure engrailed gules in 1682 he was created marquess, and had a Royal Warrant for the addition of the Royal tressure on a bordure or to his ;
arms.
Pringill of Burnhous.
L., the bend is azure, and a buck and a in ink. Burnhouse and Torsonce as are added greyhound supporters were the same family.
On
David Hop Pringille, 1445, is a bend engrailed charged with three escallops, and the same bearings appear in 1537 on the seal of John Hoppringil of Smalhame. Porteus gives Hoppringle of that Ilk, argent, on a bend engrailed sable three escallops or Galashiels, argent, on a saltire engrailed sable the seal of
:
;
(In the account of the family in the Appendix to Nisbet's Heraldry, it is stated that the saltire was often carried plain.) Blackwater, argent, a buck's head cabossed azure. The Pringles of Newfive escallops
or.
Greenknow, &c., bore azure, three escallops or, with suitable difference for the cadets.
hall, Stitchill,
marks of
The
and Haining families placed the three escallops on a chevron, and the bend does not appear in the Lyon Register at all. Adam Pryngle sat in the general council 1364 William Hoppringle represented Lauder in parliament 1587-1612; George of Torwoodlee sat for Selkirkshire 1617, and James of Whitebank 1633. In 1673 Alexander of Whytbank registered the arms given by Porteus for Galashiels, and in 1828 his representative, Alexander of Whytbank and Yair, was allowed as supporters, two pilgrims habited proper, which had occasionally been borne, as shown on old family seals he was repreClifton
;
;
senter of Robert Pringle, scutifer to the Earl of Douglas 1408. He probably descended from Roger Pringle, who had a charter of the lands of
WORKMAN'S
i6o
MS.
Whitsome from Robert I. Robert de Hoppryngil witnessed a donation to the House of Soltre before 1270. The Pringles of Torsonce, who can be traced from a.d. 1407 till their extinction 1769, were styled of that Ilk as early as 1480, and Nisbet gives or with supporters their arms argent, on a bend sable three escallops a deer and a argent, both collared sable, the collars charged
—
—
;
greyhound
Pringle of Lees, a cadet of Torsonce, bore a bend
with three escallops or. between three escallops.
James Pringle of Galashiels is, in the published accounts of the on the death of their family, said to have had two daughters, coheirs of wife brother in 1650 there were four Jean, Hugh Scott, and ancestress of the Scotts now of Gala Isabel, wife of Sir John Murray of Philiphaugh and Anna, wife of Mr James Margaret, wife of Mr Thomas Campbell Sir
—
;
;
;
;
Hamilton. or pilgrim, seems fanciful. Margaret Hop Pringle was prioress of Coldstream 1489, was succeeded by Isabella 1513-38, and she by Janet, the last prioress. QuHiTLAW OF YT Ilk. L., the boars' heads are erased, and are so
The
derivation of the
name from pelerin,
on the seals of John de Quhytlaw 1430, David Quhitlaw 151 1, and Marian Quhytlaw 1633; that of Mr Archibald, sub-dean of Glasgow 1494, has one boar's head. Johan de Whitelowe, of the county of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. 1296. Mr Archibald, above named, was Secretary of State, Ambassador to of the king's repreSpain, Auditor of Exchequer, &c. As he was one sentatives at a general council of the church at Perth in 1457, his career was long as well as distinguished, and he afterwards sat in parliament. In 1586 Peter Whitelaw sat for Perth.
Patrick Whitelaw of that Ilk fought on the Queen's side at Langside, was forfeited 1568, and had died before 1579, when the benefit of the pacification was allowed to his three daughters, who were coheirs of
The history of these their great-grandfather, John Fenton of that Ilk. ladies is remarkable Margaret, the eldest, married Sir Alexander Hamil:
ton of Innerwick, who divorced her 1589, and she married, three months afterwards, Sir John Ker of Jedburgh, Hirsel, and Littledean, who had just divorced his former wife, Julian Home of the Wedderburn family. Isobel, the second, married Andrew Kerr, brother of the Earl of Lothian, who possessed Fenton jure uxoris, and was divorced 1596; she then married William, younger son of James Ker of Corbethouse in 1603 she granted a charter to her son George, of her third share of the Whitelaw lands. Mary, the youngest daughter, married Hercules Stewart, bastard brother of Francis, Earl of Bothwell, and was charged with adultery with William Home, the king's stabler, whom she married after a divorce had ;
been obtained in 1592. Hercules was forfeited, but his daughter and heir, Margaret, was restored in 1633, and had a ratification 1641, when Patrick Whitelaw of that Ilk protested that this should not prejudice the right he had purchased and acquired to part of the Whitelaw estates.
,
WORKMAN'S Nisbet
MS.
i6i
Patrick heir male of the family, and ancestor of who married Walter Burnside, and bore the Whitelaw arms sable, a chevron or between three boars' heads couped " Gradatim plena" argent crest a crescent motto calls this
Jean, heiress of Whitelaw,
— —
;
;
Symontoun OF YT
—
L.; the sword is sometimes between two mullets, and here the lower mullet, after being drawn, has been painted over. Symington, in Lanarkshire, was granted by Robert I. to Thomas,
Ilk.
son of Richard, i.e., Thomas Dickson of Hesilside the mullets were the bearing of Dickson, and the sword may have been of the nature of an augmentation, allusive to the valour of this founder of the family. They took their surname from the barony. John Symington of that Ilk was Sheriff of Lanarkshire 1476. The Symingtons continued to hold Symington, and their older estate of Hesilside, till the middle of the seventeenth century, and were heritable captains of Douglas Castle, and bailies ;
of the barony of Douglas.
KiLPATRiK OF Closburn.
L.
"
the motto,
;
I
mak
sure," is added.
On
the seal of Roger, 1435, are two lions gardant as supporters, and Nisbet says their tincture was gules a seal of Sir Thomas, in 1498, has also supporters two lions sejant gardant, and for crest a swan's head
—
and neck.
—
;
swan used
to appear on the loch which surrounds the old castle of Closeburn, before the death of any member of It
is
said that a
the family.
On
an early
seal of
John de Kirkpatrick are the
and chief
saltire
without the cushions. Ivone de Kirkpatrick had a charter of Closeburn from Alexander II. in 1232, which was held by his descendants till the sale in 1783. John and Sir Roger de Kirkepatrik, both of Dumfriesshire, swore Sir Thomas in 13 19 had a charter of fealty to Edward I. in 1296. as a free barony. Briddeburg Roger in 1357 engaged to pay the ransom of David IL, and his son and heir, Unfred, was one of the hostages. The barons of Closeburn sat in parliament 1481, and frequently afterwards. Sir Roger was one of the witnesses, 1 141-71, of a charter of Robert, son of Robert de Brus, lord of Annandale. In 1673 Thomas of Closeburn registered arms ^argent, a St Andrew's cross azure, on a chief of the second three cushions or crest a hand holding a dagger distilling drops of blood motto " I make sure." There are no supporters recorded, but Stacie, Ross Herald, about the same time gives these bearings with the addition, "supported be two talbots hounds ar, as he was of old a barron." The late Dr Ramage notes a seal of Roger 1445, with two talbots for supporters. An old motto used by the family was " Tich and I perse." On the 1 6th May 1791, John Kirkpatrick of Culloch, in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, merchant in Ostend, registered arms argent, a saltire azure between three "stars, one in chief and two in flank gules, on a chief of the second three cushions or; crest a dexter armed hand holding a dagger in pale distilling drops of blood from its point, all proper motto ;
— —
—
;
—
—
—
;
"
I
mak
sicker." 2 s
1
WORKMAN'S
62 His descent
MS.
stated for three generations in detail, his great grandfather, Thomas Kirkpatrick of Knok, being said to be paternally descended from the house of Closeburn. Extended researches, both made officially and by private individuals, have as yet failed to establish the alleged William Kirkpatrick of Malaga, younger brother of John of descent.
was
Culloch,
is
father of the Countess of Montijo,
mother of Eugdnie,
Empress of the French, and of the Duchess of Alva. seems not improbable that Thomas Kirkpatrick, who was in not of Knok, descended from a branch of the Closeburn family seated at Kirkmichael from 1454 till 162 1. The stars added to difference the coat may have been allusive to the It
marriage of John of Culloch to Janet, daughter of Thomas Stothert of Arkland, heiress of Tarscrechan. These bearings are cut on the monument, 1687, 64. *Hewcysoune. of Alexander Howison, dean of guild, Aberdeen, and have been borne, but not registered, by the Howisons of Braehead, co. Edinburgh, who hold their estate per servitium lavacri. Their oldest charter, dated 19th April 1465, is in favour of James, son and heir of John Howison, burgess of Edinburgh, and shows that he previously held lands in the parish of Cramond. In 1588 Dundee
was represented
by a person of the In Aberdeen the name is
in parliament
name, and in 1645 Andrew sat for Kilrenny. found among the burgess families early in the fifteenth century. Hamilton (?). Azure, a heart between three cinquefoils argent; initials G.H. motto " Savit throw Cryst." Leillei. An unfinished coat quarterly, first, blank; second and third, a lily fourth, an animal passant like a sheep (?).
—
—
;
—
;
Adam
Lillay or Lily, bailie of Peebles 1369. In 1327 are mentioned the lands near Peebles, which belonged to Thomas de Lillay.
Murray of Cask.
formerly
chevron between three mullets are the bearings on the seal of William de Moravia of Tullibardine 1292, 65.
Duke
ancestor of the
In
L., the
of Athole.
501 Sir William of Tullibardine used three mullets within the Royal tressure crest a peacock's head supported by two arms and for supporters two lions. Sir David of Tullibardine sat in the general council 1442, William of Tullibardine in parliament 147 1 and later, and most of their successors, 1
—
till
;
—
;
raised to the peerage 1604.
Maxwell of Calderwood.
L. the seal of John of Calderwood, has a saltire within a bordure, quartering a bend for Dennistoun 1470, that of Robert of Calderwood, 1508, makes the bordure countercompony. This was recorded about 1672, and in 1793 Sir William Maxwell of " as lineal heir male of the Maxwells of Calderwood, Bart., was allowed, Pollock," to carry the arms of that family argent, on a saltire sable an annulet or, in the first and fourth quarters ; second, argent, a saltire sable within a bordure countercompony of the second and first ; third, argent, ;
;
—
WORKMAN'S MS. —a head proper mottoes — "
163
I am ready," a bend azure crest stag's " Think on ;" supporters an ape chained and a stag proper. The crest formerly used was a man's head. Calderwood has been the seat of this branch of the Maxwells for nearly five hundred years. Sir John was a lord auditor 1450, and sat in parliament. Baillie of Lamentoun. L. Sir James Balfour and Porteus reduce the number of mullets to nine. William Baillie of Lamington registered 1672-78 azure, nine stars (of six points wavy), three, three, two, and one or. Some branches of the family, as Jerviswood, retained the field sable. The seal of Sir John in 1292 has only six stars. The head of the family had assumed as supporters, before Nisbet wrote, two boars' proper.
—
;
;
;
—
David II. in 1368 grants a charter of the barony of Lamington to Sir William Baillie an attempt has been made, without evidence, to trace the Baillies to a son of the Royal Baliols, and, with more probability, to a daughter of Sir William Wallace. In 1331 the Exchequer Rolls mention the sale of the ward of William de Bailliff, probably the same person. William of Lamington sat in parliament 1481. Sir William, last of the direct line, settled his estate on his son-inlaw, Edward Maxwell, commendator of Dundrennan, younger son of John Lord Herries, obliging him and the heirs of the marriage to assume the name and arms of Baillie. This marriage took place 1577, and in a deed 1582, the baron of Lamington designs Maxwell, fiar of Lamington, dilecto meo filio legali et adoptivo. In 1581 an act of parliament was passed excusing Maxwell from assuming the surname, but obliging his son and heir to fulfill the ;
condition.
The
heir general of the Lamington family is Sir Charles Ross of Balnagowan, but the estate has descended to Alexander Lord Lamington.
On
the tombstone of
Edward Maxwell, and Margaret
Baillie, his
the first, the Maxwell wife, in the church of Terregles, are two shields saltire with nine mullets, three in chief and three iri each flank for Baillie, and a hedgehog in base for Herries ; the other has the nine mulldts, :
and one, with a plain chief, as the wife's arms. of Apilgirth. Jardan L.; in Font's MS. the crest, a heron
three, three, two,
-hold-
ing in her beak a laurel, is given but that usually borne is a spur rowel, with the motto, " Cave adsum," which were registered in 1706 by Sir John Jardine, Bart., with supporters a horse at liberty, and a man in armour with a scymetar at his side, all proper. Umfrid de Jardyne witnessed a charter of Robert de Brus to the ;
—
monastery of Arbroath
1 1
78-80.
Umfrey du Gardin, of the county of Dumfries, did homage to
Edward David
in 1296
I.
gives a charter, c. 1330, to William de Gardine, of the barony of Hartside, co. Lanark, which remained in the possession of the Applegirth family till about 16 17. Applegirth was erected into a barony in 1672.
II.
1
WORKMAN'S
64
MS.
Alexander of Applegirth sat in parliament 1572, and in 1503 John was dempster of parliament. The barony of Kirkanders, in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, was for a considerable time possessed by the Applegirth Jardines they some" and the seat is still called that of times had the designation Ilk," family ;
Jardine Hall.
Makcellene of Bumby. M'Lelan of
L.;
David
II.
granted a charter to Gilbert
his lands.
family possessed Bombie in the fifteenth century, and James V. granted a charter of that property as a barony to Thomas Maclellan. Sir Robert sat in parliament 162 1, and was created Lord Kirkcud-
The
bright 1633.
RuiTHERFURD OF YT
Ilk.
L.
the inescutcheon seems to be voided
;
charged of another or, and neither in this representation, nor in that given by Sir D. Lindsay, has the charge the proportion of an orle this, however, is probably due to carelessness as to proportion, as the same is found in the coats of Landale and Baliol. The seal of William Rothirford (? the parson of Liliesleaf, who swore a bull's head cabossed with a man's head affrontde fealty to Edward I.) has or, or
;
between the horns. In 1554 David Ruthirfurd uses a fess charged with three martlets, between a mullet in chief and a boar's head erased in base. In 1296 Sir Nicholas de Rotherford, and three others of the name, all located in the shires of Roxburgh and Berwick, did homage to
Edward I. The surname
is taken from a locality near Kelso, and appears as William the Lion, when Gregory de Rutherford witof early as the reign nessed a charter of Roger Burnard to the monastery of Melrose.
Katherine Rutherford, towards the end of the fifteenth century, married James Stewart of Traquair, and became heiress of Rutherford, in consequence of which the Traquair family quartered the arms. Rutherford of Edgerston, the heir male, is represented by Lord Sinclair and Mr Oliver- Rutherfurd of that place, as coheirs of line, and by Henry Rutherfurd of Fairnington, as heir male.
—
The
coat recorded, 1672-78, by John of Edgerston is ^argent, an orle gules, in chief three martlets sable beaked of the second. The inescutcheon voided or, remained the bearing of the family
seated at Hundolie, near Jedburgh, from the beginning of the fifteenth century the heiress married Sir James Ker, and her descendant, the Marquess of Lothian, inherits the estate and representation. ;
CoKBURNE OF Ormestoune.
—
Sir D. Lindsay gives argent, here it is a bordure three cocks within argent, a fess checquy gules azure and of the field between three cocks gules, which was registered, The fess checquy was undoubtedly 1672-78, by Adam of Ormiston. borne to indicate descent from the marriage of John de Cockburn with 66.
—
;
Janet, daughter of David II.
and heir of Alexander Lindsay of Ormiston,
in the reign
WORKMAN'S
MS,
165
Nisbet says they bore two lions as supporters, and Craufurd gives another variation of the arms three cocks within a bordure compony azure and argent while Porteus says a bordure checquy.
—
;
William of Ormiston sat in the general council 1440 Sir John was Justice-Clerk 1591, and sat in parliament; Adam was Justice-Clerk 1692, Treasurer-Depute 1699, and again Justice-Clerk 1705-10. *Setoun of Touch. Sir Alexander Seton married in 1408 Elizabeth, heiress of the great house of Gordon, and sat in parliament as Lord Gordon in 1437 ^^^ subsequently. Their son and successor, Alexander, Earl of Huntly, resigned his earldom and a great part of his estate, and obtained a charter 20th ;
January 1449, preferring his son by his third wife, Elizabeth Crichton, to his eldest son by Giles, daughter and heir of John Hay of Touch, Tullibody, and Enzie. This son, Alexander Seton, inherited his mother's property and parts of the original Gordon estate, co. Berwick he was designed Master of Gordon and Lord Gordon even after his disinheritance in 1449. The direct male line ended on the death of James Seton of Touch in 1742, but the estate and heritable office of armour-bearer and squire of the body to the King of Scotland have descended to Sir Henry James Seton;
Steuart, Bart.
and his descendant, Sir Bruce Maxwell Seton, Bart., has, in the opinion of the late John Riddell, advocate, a good claim to the barony of Gordon. Two greyhounds as supporters are on a seal of uncertain date of Seton of Touch, with a boar's head erased as crest, and the motto, "Ford" wards ours the arms are those here represented. These bearings, with the supporters, were used at the funeral of Mrs Seton of Touch 1725, the boar's head being couped, and the Hay tinctures altered to the usual argent and gules, and were so recorded in 177 1. L., the seal of John de Ormistun 67. Ormistoun of yatt Ilk. Sir
Henry Seton of Abercorn became
heir
male
;
;
Lessedwyn to the Abbey of Melrose in 1306, has an eagle displayed. Alan de Hormiston witnessed a charter in the reign of Alexander H. In 1288 Henry de Ormistoun had been killed and his goods forfeited for felony. In 1296 John de Ormeston of the county of Roxburgh, Henry of the county of Edinburgh, Alice of the same county, and Alice, wife or widow of Alan de Ormeston, also of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. appended
to a charter of his lands of
Robert
II.,
James Douglas
in the seventh year of his reign, ratified a charter by Sir of Dalkeith of part of the lands of Drumcross to Andrew
de Ormystoun.
James Ormiston of that Ilk, and several of his kinsfolk, were forfeited as accomplices in the murder of King Henry, and the barony of Ormiston remained in the possession of Ker of Cessford, although claimed by a James Ormiston as late as 1585. In 1592 several of the Ormistons were forfeited for treason along with Francis, Earl of Bothwell.
2T
1
WORKMAN'S
66
MS.
Adversity seems to have driven the descendants of this turbulent race to adopt more safe and profitable pursuits; in 1693 arms are registered by Joseph Ormistoun, merchant in Kelso, and then merchant in London, and in 1697 he and William Eliot obtained an Act of the Privy Council for establishing a manufactory of silk. Henderside, near Kelso, the property of the Ormstones for several generations, passed by marriage into the family of Waldie. TwEDiE OF Drumelzier. L.; the arms are cut in stone at Drumel" zier Castle, with a bull's head as crest, and the motto, Thol and think."
Mr
Laing describes the seal used in 151 1 by John of Drumelzier as a saltire couped and a fess (? chief) charged with a mullet crest a wolf's head. The Tweedies of Oliver bore the saltire engrailed, but the chief is omitted altogether on stones there where the arms are cut with the dates " Tholl and 1649 and 1734; the crest is a boar's head couped; motto
—
;
—
think on."
John de Tuedy
lived in the reign of
Alexander
III.
in
1296 Fynlay de Twydyn del counte de Lanark swore fealty to Edward L Robert L, in 1326, granted a charter of the barony of Drumelzier to Roger, son of Fynlay, on the resignation of Sir William Eraser. James of Drumelzier married a daughter of Sir James Douglas of Dalkeith and Lady Agnes Dunbar. William of Drumelzier sat in parliament 1560; Gilbert Tweedie represented the burgh of Peebles 1579, and James of Drumelzier the ;
;
county in 1608.
The
elder line sold their estates
and disappeared before
1630. Oliver
was held by a branch of the Tweedies from the Preceptors of Torphichen from 1489, if not earlier, and was granted by charter in 1565 to William Tweedie by James, Lord of Torphichen on the death, in 1837, of Laurence Tweedie of Oliver, his property was inherited by his nephew, George Tweedie Stodart, father of the present proprietor, and Tweedie of Quarter became heir male. LoKERTT OF YE Lee, L. Sir James Balfour gives the same, but Porteus says they sometimes bore an engrailed bordure or. The seal of Andrew Loccart, 141 o, is a fess between three fetterlocks, and the Lockharts of Barr in Ayrshire carried a bend sable charged with three fetter;
The Cleghorn
family, believed to be a branch of Lee, originally bore the three boars' heads with a crescent, but afterwards (Porteus and Lyon Register, 1672-78) dropped the crescent, and carried ^azure, three
locks or.
—
boars' heads erased argent.
Nisbet says the Lockharts of Lee altered their coat either to perpetuate the belief that an ancestor accompanied Sir James Douglas when he left Scotland to take the heart of Robert L to Jerusalem, " or to make their arms more univocal to the name." This modern coat argent, a man's heart proper within a fetterlock sable, on a chief azure three boars' heads erased of the field ^was registered with supporters by John Lockhart of Lee 1735, and was used on a seal, 1661, by Sir George of CarnIn 1798 two wild harts proper as wath, but with the heads couped.
—
—
WORKMAN'S
MS.
167
supporters were granted to Allan Lockhart of Cleghorn, the last heir male of his line, being, perhaps, an attempt at a variation of the pun upon heart.
Stephen Lockard witnessed a charter of Richard de Morville before 1
153-
Malcolm possessed lands in Ayrshire 1164, and was father of Symon Locarde, who founded Symonstoune, in Lanarkshire. Sir Symon possessed Symonstoune 1273; Malcolm of the county of Ayr, and Cristin of Peeblesshire, in 1296 swore fealty to Edward I., who restored to the latter lands in that county and in Linlithgowshire, and also lands in
Edinburgh
to Margaret,
widow
of Stephen Loccarde.
Adam was
Sheriff of Peebles 1359. styled of Lee was Sir Simon,
The first c. 1315-30 monks of Newbotle connect him with William, son ;
transactions with
of Malcolm, who an had annual rent from the lands of Kynnard, and probably also with Sir Stephen, who possessed Craig, now Craiglockhart, in the reign of Alexander II L Stephen sat in parliament 1485, William in 1505, John in 1567, George of Barr in 1572, and James of Lee 1607; Barr was granted by charter of Robert III. to Andrew, and remained in the family till nearly the end of the seventeenth century. Cleghorn has been the seat of a separate branch of the family since about 1440. name taken from their lands in Dumfriesshire. *Marjoribanks. Robert of that Ilk was succeeded by Mr Thomas of Ratho, who was Provost of Edinburgh 1540, sat in parliament, was (1549) a Lord of Session and Lord Clerk Register; he seems to have alienated the old family the
a
His descendant, Thomas of Balbairdie, co. Linlithgow, registered arms 1672-78, as representative of Marjoribanks of that Ilk argent, a mullet gules, on a chief sable a cushion or. He acquired the barony of Bathgate 1664, and lands to which the name of Marjoribanks was given by charter 1696, and they were erected property.
—
a barony. Alexander Marjoribanks, Esq., Edinburgh, represents younger son of the Lord Clerk Register was grandfather of John, bailie of Leith and of Edinburgh, who in 1653 acquired Leuchie,
into
this line.
A
—
Haddington; his son, Joseph of Leuchie, registered arms 1672-78 argent, on a chief gules a cushion between two spur rowels of the field, and in 1819 supporters were granted to Sir John Marjoribanks, Bart., as CO.
representer of Leuchie.
Elphinstoun of yt Ilk. L., the chevron The seal of John de Elfiestun,. 1292, is a
is
engrailed. boar's head couped with
Elphinstone, in East Lothian, ^ave a name to this family the original estate having passed to the family of Johnstone by marriage, Petindrich, which had been granted by charter 1397 to William de Elphinstone, and other lands in the county of Stirling, were, by Crown charter 1503, erected into the barony of Elphinstone in favour of Sir John, whose son, Alexander, was created a peer.
a fleur-de-lis in ;
chief.
1
WORKMAN'S
68
MS,
Three persons of this name belonging to the counties of Edinburgh and Berwick, swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296. In 147 1 William Elphinstone, Chancellor of Scotland, afterwards Bishop of Aberdeen, sat in parliament. The first lord had a grant of the lordship of Kildrummie, co. Aberdeen, which was erected into a regality, and the family for a time styled
themselves Lords Kildrummie. The crest on the seal of Robert Lord Elphinstone 1564, was a sword bendways in several MSS. it is a sword with a hand about to grasp it, ;
VL
or perhaps having dropped it in the reign of James the present crest was adopted. *Rentoun of yt Ilk. coat entirely different from that given by Sir D. Lyndsay and Sir R. Forman for Renton of Billy. ;
A
The
seal of
John de Renton, 1430, has a lion rampant, and that of earlier, is described by Mr Laing as "a chevron
John Renton, a year between three buckles this representation. are argent, a lion
—
lion
was
(?);"
perhaps the charges
may have been
towers, as in
The arms rampant
registered, 1672-78, by John of Lammerton within a bordure azure. Nisbet says the
carried with alterations of tincture
and additions,
to
show
that
they held of the Earls of March. The name is taken from Renton in the Merse. John de Rainton or Rayneton was custumar of Berwick 1327-32 Robert de Ren tun witnessed a charter of Herbert, Abbot of Kelso, c. 1225 Billy was the seat of the ;
;
family in the fifteenth century, and Lammerton belong to a descendant in the female line.
and Mordington
still
Sir Thomas, physician to George I., of the Berwickshire family, is said in the Appendix to Nisbet's Heraldry to have carried azure, a lion
—
rampant argent, on a chief gules (?) three stars he died in 1740. Agnes, first Countess of Leven, is affiliated by genealogists to the Billy family, ;
but the accounts of her descent are contradictory. Her lordship's father, William, seems to have been a citizen of Dundee, and is complimentarily designed "of that Ilk," and "of Billy;" her mother's name was Alexander, and she is erroneously called sister of the Earl of Stirling.
—
The Renton
coat assigned to the Countess is argent, a lion rampant azure charged on the shoulder with a buckle or escallop, a bordure engrailed of the second.
FiERNYE OF YT
Ilk.
L., the fess is sable.
A name
taken from a William de Ferny occurs in 1390; his descendants locality in Fife. held the various offices of keeper of Falkland forest, constable of Cupar, and mair of fee of Crail. Ferny was alienated early in the seventeenth century, and the heiress married Lovell of Ballumbie. The arms are cut in stone on a monument at Cupar of the fifteenth century.
The
coat given here is exactly that of Fermor, Earl of Pomfret, in England, and a family of Farmer, in England, bore the same, with three anchors or on the fess anchors are the bearing of Ferme or Fairholme ;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
169
would seem that these southern families, with a surname certainly derived from an occupation, have wished to make out a Sir George Fermor of Easton Neston, ancestor of the Scottish descent. Lords Pomfret, was, in 1591, allowed by Cooke, Clarenceux, to omit the anchors from his shield. *Meik. These arms were registered about 1680 by Patrick Meik of Ledcassie, co. Perth, without the water in base, and with the boar's head argent and in 1693 very nearly the same were allowed to Alexander Mikieson of Hill, also in Perthshire. Patrick of Ledcassie, now Carsie, was grandson of Thomas of that also of place, who died in 1654, aged seventy, and grandfather of Patrick, Ledcassie, which he sold in 1745. in Scotland, so
it
;
The Rev. George Meik,
minister of Redgorton 1713-56, uncle of the the last laird of Leidcassie, was ancestor of the present James Meik, Esq., his representative, and of Thomas Meik, C.E., Edinburgh. The family appear as holding lands from the Abbots of Cupar from the middle of the fifteenth century; William Mek, in 1457, had a tack of part of Cowbyr others of the name of Meik or Meyk held lands con;
In 152 1 Patrick Meyk contracted tinuously in Cupar, Arthurston, &c. his son Andrew in marriage to the sister of Den John Hugone of Cupar.
William Meek, in 1664, acquired Fortisset, co. Lanark, which remains in the possession of his descendants. L. Thomas dictus Tayt occurs in the Exche69. Taite of Pirn. quer Rolls 1329 Robert IIL granted a charter of Pren, co. Peebles, to John Tait; and 1441 George Tayt, in a charter, designs himstU cfomtnus ;
;
de
le
Pryne.
George
Tait, last of the direct line, died in or before 1677, leaving
two daughters, Margaret and Anne the elder married Alexander Horsbrugh of that Ilk, and was succeeded in Pirn by her son William, and her ;
daughter Janet. On the death, unmarried, of the latter in 1732, her halfbrother, John Horsbrugh, inherited Pirn, which is the property of his descendant, who has no blood of the ancient owners. William Tait of Pirn, in Mid-Lothian, descends from ancestors seated there for several generations. A younger son of the old family settled in Sweden.
Secretary to birth,
and
King Eric XIV., having
was recognised as
for crest, a hart's
He
noble.
1632 made
in
bore three stars argent On the chief,
head with a star between the
Hakkett of Petferrane.
Jacob, Private proof of his gentle
attires.
the arms are registered with the chief argent and the lion gules supporters two falcons proper. Richard Haketwas on an inquest c. 1240, Donald Haket 1328; David possessed Lumfennan in the reign of David II. Robert was, 1372, appointed L.
—
;
;
;
Sheriff of Kinross for life; in 1399 Philip acquired Pitferrane, which in 1677 was erected into a free barony. John Halkett sat in parliament for
Kirkaldy 1593, and
The
family
is
of the lairds of Pitfirrane after 1649. represented by Sir Peter Arthur Halkett, Bart, (pater-
many
2U
WORKMAN'S
I70
MS,
as heir of line, and by John Cornelius Craigie-Halnally Wedderburn), as heir male. kett-Inglis of Cramond, apparently The owners of Pitfirrane had, by gift in 1565, the singular privilege of selling and exporting coal free of custom or export duty; this right was ratified in 1706-7, and purchased by government in 1788. *Blanerne, the arms of Lumsdaine of Blenearn, co. Berwick. The
Adam
de Lumsden, 1430, and of Thomas, 1431, have a bend two mullets, while that of Gilbert de Lumsden, 1430, is a charged with bend sinister engrailed between three mullets, two in chief and one in seals of
Mr
Alexander, parson of Flisk, uses, in 1485, a chevron charged and in 1576 the bearings of Mr with three mullets, in base a rose are chevron a of Kinkell, Thomas, parson charged with three mullets. Sir D. Lindsay gives Lumsden of Conland, co. Fife argent, a chevron sable between two wolves' or hounds' heads couped gules in chief, base.
;
—
and an escallop vert
in base.
Nisbet says, the earn perching on a salmon was added after a marriage with the heiress of Blenearn of that Ilk, but there seems no proof of such a marriage. Thomas de Blanerne of Berwickshire swore
Edward L
in 1296. as coat, painted in 1604 at Falahill, had the two mullets in chief and only a buckle on the chevron. The family take their name from lands in Berwickshire, which were sold in 1607, but repurchased by a descendant, and are now in the possession of Mr Sandys-Lumsdaine of Lumsdaine, Blenearn, and Innergellie. fealty to
The
Adam
and Rogier de Lummesden of Berwickshire swore there was a charter, in 1322, of the lands of Blenfealty to Edward I. earn to Gilbert de Lumesden. In 1349 an English safe-conduct was granted to Thomas de Lummesden, vallettus comitis de Fife he was probably founder of the family in Fife which ended in Margaret Lumsden of Conland, who married Robert Lundin of Balgonie about 1544. Robert, younger son of Thomas of Conland, had a charter of lands in Cushnie, co. Aberdeen, 1472, and founded a family still seated there. The arms registered by Sir James of Innergellie, co. Fife, 1672-78, are azure, a chevron or between a wolf's head couped and a buckle in chief, and in base an escallop argent supporters a lion gules and a boar proper an earn devouring a salmon. A little later Alexander of Cushnie crest recorded azure, a buckle or between two wolves' heads in chief and an but on a panel at Cushnie are carved the arms escallop in base argent of R. L. and E. R., 1618 a chevron between two wolves' heads couped and the lady's name was Reith, and her arms are a cross an escallop In 1296
;
;
—
—
;
—
;
—
—
;
;
engrailed.
Ker of Cesfurd.
Vert, on a chevron argent three mullets gules, in base a unicorn's head erased of the second. Carmichell of yt Ilk. L. ; the fess wreathed appears on seals of
members of
this family early in the fifteenth century. took their name from Carmichael, co. Lanark, which they held They
WORKMAN'S
MS.
171
of the Earls of Douglas. George, Treasurer of Glasgow, sat in parliament 1475-82, and was elected Bishop 1482, but died before consecration. John of that Ilk, and John of Meadowflat, sat in parliament 1560.
In 1647 Sir James was created a peer, and the dormant claimed by Sir James Robert Carmichael, Bart.
*Edingtown of yt
titles
are
These arms, with the heads couped, were registered, 1672-78, by George of Balbarton, the representative of Edington of that Ilk, but the lands had been lost from which the name was taken. The early seals of the family differ entirely from the coat given here. Ilk.
Adam
de Edington used a chief charged with three birds Richard, c. 1450, a chevron between three birds; and Gilbert, in 1453, a bend charged with three mullets, and in sinister chief a hunting-horn. Sir D. Lindsay gives Blackadder 70. *Blakytar of Tillialane, of that Ilk, CO. Berwick the second and third quarters are for Edmonstone, heiress of Tulliallan, who married Patrick Blackadder c. 1480. Robert, Archbishop of Glasgow, who died in 1508, has the chevron charged with three roses on his seal 1491, 1500; and the same bearings are used in 15 19 by Robert, commendator of Coldingham. The Tulliallan branch at first carried a mullet in base as a difference, as shown on ;
;
John of Tulliallan 1547, and of Roland, a younger son, who was sub-dean of Glasgow 1529. A representation of the archbishop's arms in the Cathedral of Glasgow gives two animals as supporters, which might be horses or foxes. Robert of Blackadder was in parliament 1464. Robert, last of Blackadder, fell at Flodden, and left two coheiresses, Beatrix and Margaret, who married John and Robert, younger sons of Sir David Home of Wedderburn from the former descended the Homes who long possessed Blackadder, and quarter the arms. Tulliallan became heir male, and in 1529 John Blackadder had a charter of that estate as a barony in 1626 Sir John was created a baronet the seal of
;
;
with a grant of the barony of Blackadder in Nova Scotia, with remainder to his heirs male whomsoever. Financial embarrassment led to a judicial sale of the property, and his descendants not assuming the title, John Blackadder, tailor in Edinburgh, of illegitimate descent, in 1734 managed to carry through a service as heir to the first baronet, and made an unsuccessful claim to the estate, which ended in his being convicted of perjury. It
is
incorrectly stated that Marion Blackadder, wife of Laurence was heiress of Tulliallan. ^
Oliphant of Condie, that
The baronetcy remained dormant, although there seems np doubt Mr John, minister of Troqueer, who died a prisoner in the Bass
1686,
was
heir to
it,
and
left
a large family, the male
line of
which
is
extinct-
*Broun of Hartryk.
The Brouns
been erroneously stated to bear three
some MSS. made gules
of Hartree, co. Lanark, have fleurs-de-lis on the chief, which is in
show the charges
be mullets, and Crawfurd accounts for the change of bearing by saying " the author of ;
their seals
to
WORKMAN'S
172
MS.
house being a depender of Douglas, Earle of Morton, obtained both He might have added that there the lands and coat in favour of him." was a connection by alliance as well as by vassalage. In 1424 James Douglas, Lord of Dalkeith, granted a charter of confirmation of the lands of Hertre to Richard Broun, and his heirs by Elizabeth de Tuede, his this
spouse, described as grand-daughter of the granter, her father, the Baron of Drumelzier, having married the daughter of the Lord of Dalkeith. The Brouns were seated at Hartree in 1376 or earlier, and retained the
about 1630. Roger, younger son of the late Richard of Hartree, had Cultermains from James, Earl of Douglas, in 1440, and that estate descended to John, who sold it in 1817, and left a son, the late John Brown, W.S. From the Hartree family also descended John Broun of Gorgie Milne, near Edinburgh, who, in 1674, registered arms azure, a fess vair between three fleurs-de-lis argent, thus reverting to the better-known Broun charge and dropping the Douglas mullets his descendants for a time possessed the barony of Braid, and the present representative is Archibald Broun of Johnstounburn, co. Haddington, advocate. 71. Foster of Corstorphin. L.; a fess gules is added between the three hunting-horns a ratchhound and a greyhound, both collared gules, " for supporters a dog's head for crest, and the motto, Hunter bla vy property
till
—
;
;
;
horn."
Marchmont Herald,
gives the arms of the first Lord Forrester, making the fess sable, and the crest, a hunting-horn argent stringed Other variations are met with, and the arms of this family have gules. been not registered. On the seal, 1400, of Adam of Corstorphine are—a chevron and three Esplin,
hunting-horns, but Archibald of Corstorphin has the three horns only, with a dog's head as crest, which were also used by James of Corstorphine Nisbet says that he saw a seal of Archibald of Corstorphine, 1482, 1547. with two dogs as supporters. Adam dictus Forrester, burgess of Edinburgh 1362, was the founder of the family, and acquired a great estate ; he was knighted, and held offices of dignity. His son. Sir John, Master of the King's Household and Great
Chamberlain, had Corstorphine, a part of which had been acquired by his father from William More of Abercorn Sir John founded the collegiate church of Corstorphine. Members of this family, from the founder ;
inclusive, sat in the general councils
and
in parliament.
Walter was Bishop of Brechin 1401 till about 1 421, and was Lord Clerk Register. The Forresters of Skippnich, Garden, and Torwoodhead were an eminent family, and were hereditary keepers of the forest of Torwood. Sir
Duncan was comptroller
in the reign of James IV. His daughter married Alexander of and in Margaret 1636 their descendant, Corstorphine, first Lord had a charter of Torwoodhead and other lands Forrester, George, united into a barony but at this time the original family of Torwood;
.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
173
head was represented by James Forrester. The printed pedigrees omit the Master of Corstorphine, son of the first Lord who, in 1636, was married to the widow of Mr Alexander Keith he must have died childless before 1 651, when Lord Forrester, on his own resignation, obtained a re-grant of his titles and estates in favour of the heirs male of the marriage of his fourth daughter, Jane, with James Baillie, the heirs male of the marriage of his fifth daughter, Lilias, with William Baillie, &c. The title has descended under this limitation to the Earl of Verulam, but the Earl of Glasgow represents Helen Lady Ross, eldest daughter and coheir of George, first Lord Forrester. ;
The burgh
of
Stirling
was
often
represented
in
parliament by
Matthew, Duncan, and Robert Forrester between 1468 and 1587. Walter was a member of the King's Council 1398-99. Dalmhoy of yt Ilk. L. these arms were registered by Sir Alexander Dalmahoy, with two serpents nowed as supporters, which had been long carried. The name is taken from their lands in Mid-Lothian in 1296 Alexander de Dalmahoy of that county, and Henry de Dalmahoy of Linlithgowshire, swore fealty to Edward L Alexander had all his lands united into the free barony of Dalmahoy 1598; Sir John was Sheriff of the county, and sat in parliament, 1639. The baronetcy, conferred in 1679 on John Dalmahoy of that Ilk, became extinct on the death of Sir John Hay Dalmahoy, clerk, fifth baronet loth October 1800. Sir John of that Ilk is said to have married a daughter of Sir Bernard Lindsay, brother of the Earl of Crawford. Her father, Bernard Lindsay, was of Lochhill in Mid-Lothian, and his father, Thomas Lindsay, was Snowdon Herald and searcher general of Leith Thomas seems unaffiliated, and in the funeral escutcheons of the Dalmahoys two ;
;
;
Lindsay coats are assigned to their ancestress. In the funeral escutcheons the official baton which the Dalmahoys bore as under masters of the King's Household is represented, but it is not different
recorded in the Lyon Register. Sir Alexander de Dalmahoy, c. 1265, granted permission to the monks of Newbottle to pass freely through his lands of Dalmahoy 7 he and his son Alexander, about the same date, are witnesses to a charter in favour of that monastery. Sandelandis of Caulder. L. there are added in ink crest a (?) " boar's head motto " I traest a better;" supporters a lady and a savage. ;
These
—
;
—
:
—
Walter Lord Torphichen 1672-78, when the crest is an eagle displayed proper; motto " Spero meliora;'" supporters two .lions or. The seal of Sir James, Lord of Torphichen and St John, had a chief charged with a label of three points but he more generally used the coat of the Lord of St John, as given in this MS., which is quartered by the Lords Torphichen. Two savages have also been used as supporters. The additions here are valuable, as being the only MS. authority found for the old crest and motto of the Calder family, before their succession to Torphichen, when differ
from the entry
in the
Lyon Register
—
;
2
X
for
—
1
WORKMAN'S
74
MS.
they took the eagle crest borne by the Lord of St John. Nisbet describes a seal of Sir Alexander of Calder 1466, with the crest, the head and neck of a horse, but here it is a head without neck, and like that of a boar Mr Riddell calls it a camel's head. Sir James of Calder sat in parliament 1487, and John of Calder ;
in 1560.
The barony of West-Calder was given
to Sir
James de Sandilands by
William, Earl of Douglas, in free marriage with his sister, Eleanor, Countess of Carrick 1335; it remains the property of Lord Torphichen, heir general of the old Douglases. Lauder of Haltoun. L. there " virtus." ;
is
added as
crest,
a tower, with the
Afterwards the griffin in the arms post funera was borne holding a sword in its fore-paw, supporting a saracen's head a demi-griffin issuing from a tower crest motto " Strike proper l^ivii
motto,
—
;
—
;
alike."
Alan Lauder possessed Hatton, in the county of Edinburgh, early in the reign of Robert IL; the laird sat in parliament 1471, and subMr Richard, last of Hatton, who died 1675, having no male sequently. issue, settled that barony and other lands, all de novo erected into a free barony 1660, on his younger daughter, Elizabeth, and her husband, Hon. Charles Maitland, afterwards Earl of Lauderdale, they and their successors being bound to take the surname and carry the arms of Lauder of Hatton.
The
elder daughter, Jean, married in 1650 Sir Thomas Elphinstone of Calderhall, and left issue. The printed pedigrees of the Landers are very misleading.
In the remarks on the Ragman Roll in Nisbet's Heraldry, Henry de Laudere is said to have taken the oaths, but this is not so the name is Henry de Larder. The name is taken from Lauder in Berwickshire, and a family long remained there with the designation of Lauder of that Ilk Robert, last of the direct line, was dead in 1658, leaving an only child, Isobel Lauder of that Ilk, wife of Alexander Home, bailie of Lauder; in 1683 she was ;
;
dead, leaving three daughters, divided.
among whom
the Lauder property
was
William, called "of the Dails," burgess of Lauder, living in 1517, had a charter of some lands in 1542, from Robert Lauder of the Bass, who styles him dilectus consanguineus, and was ancestor of John Lauder of Newington, merchant in Edinburgh, who, as " descended of the old family of Lauder of that Ilk," registered arms 1672-78 ^gules, a griffin salient argent, in dexter canton a tower or a balance equilibriated crest " or; motto Mediocriajirma.'" He acquired Fountainhall 1 681, which was erected into a barony the next year, and was created a baronet. In 1699 his son. Sir John, a senator of the College of Justice, had a patent of arms with two lions argent as supporters in the coat the tower was The omitted, and a bordure argent substituted as a mark of difference. crest and motto were also altered. The griffin segreant appears on very old seals, and in 1425 Sir
—
—
;
;
—
WORKMAN'S
MS.
175
Robert of the Bass bore the Royal tressure with the lions as supporters.
was justiciary in the reign of Robert I. Alexander, of Dunkeld, died 141 1 ; Thomas, Bishop of Dunkeld, died 1481 Bishop William was Bishop of Glasgow and Chancellor of Scotland, and died Sir Robert
;
;
1425
;
Robert was Bishop of Dunblane 1447
;
and George, Bishop of
Argyle 1427-62.
Mr Henry
Lauder of St Germains, King's Advocate and Senator of the College of Justice, who died in 1561, was son of Gilbert, an Edinburgh burgess. The Landers of the Bass long held that rocky island and great estates in
East-Lothian,
including
Tynynghame, Balgone, Pencaitland, &c.
They seem
to have been in financial difficulties early in the seventeenth century, and parted with most of their property; a branch retained Bielmouth. Sir Robert of that place was knighted, and Robert of Biel-
mouth, who died there 1768, seems to have been the last of his line. From 1 47 1 till 1600 the barons of Bass sat in almost every parliament. Alexander, Provost of Edinburgh, sat in parliament 1503-5. Crawfurd of Hanyng. L. the arms here differ, being gules, a fess ermine between two mullets in chief argent, and a stag's head in base " couped or attired sable the motto, Christus vita" is added. Of this family was Archibald, Abbot of Holyrood 1457, Lord High Treasurer 1474, who died before i486. His seals are apparently indistinct, as Mr Laing describes one of 1465 as having only a fess checquy, (?) ermine; another engraved in the Chartulary of Holyrood, shows three charges (perhaps ermine spots) on the fess, one mullet in dexter and a charge in sinister chief. In. the " Lives of the Officers of State," a fess ermine and a mullet in dexter chief are the arms assigned to the abbot. Sir William possessed the lands of Haining and barony of Manuel, c. 1400. Agnes, Lady of Haining 1546, daughter and coheir of William Crawfurd of that place, married Thomas, son of Alexander Lord ;
—
;
Livingstone.
Mynteith of Kerss. L. the second and third quarters, azure, three buckles or. The seal of John Menteith has the Stewart fess ;
checquy surmounted of a bend, and these bearings were afterwards William of Kerse in 1496 simplified by conversion into a bend checquy. uses the bend checquy quartering a bend charged with three buckles for In 1517 William of Stirling, and for crest, a swan's head and neck. Kerse has the same arrangement, but the Stirling bend is engrailed and the crest issues from a coronet. About 1673 George Monteith, merchant in Edinburgh, representer of Kerse, registered the arms given in this MS.; and James of Auldcathie, a cadet, dropped the Stirling quarter and adopted a canton sable charged with a lion's head erased or. John, son of Sir Walter de Menteith, married, in 1357, Mary, daughter heir of Sir John Stirling of Kerse and Alva; their descendants long held and
WORKMAN'S
176
MS.
these baronies with the offices of sheriff and forester of Clackmannan. Sir William sat in parliament 1484-88 and another Sir William in the ;
general council held after Flodden. Robert of Kerse sat in parliament 1560. his descendants and those of his Sir William sold Kerse in 1631 ;
brothers having failed, Sir Robert Dalyell of Binns (paternally, Menteith of Auldcathie) was, in 1772, recognised in the Lyon Court as heir male of this ancient family. Sir James Stuart-Menteth represents the next branch. 72. Hepburne of Beinstoune. Hepburn with a mullet argent in arm difference crest a dexter vested issuing from clouds, the base for hand grasping the bridle of a horse's head, which issues from the wreath ; motto " Gratus esto ;" a lion gardant gules on the dexter side as supThe arms, with a mullet in base, are on the seal of John of Beanporter.
—
;
—
Nisbet says this family descends from a second son of 1538. Hepburn of Smeaton. Sir Patrick of Whitecastle, bailie of the nunnery of Haddington, who was charged with treason 1567, was grandfather of ston
Patrick of Beanston, from
whom
descended Robert of that place, living in
172573.
rising
;
Logan of Restalrig.
L.; there are
motto — " Luif ane God, under
and a man
added "
crest— a demi-eagle
—
ane King supporters a horse dressed in a short tunic, head bare with a band round it, and ;
and flowing. Porteus, and some other meeting in point and piercing a man's heart.
hair long piles
:
authorities, give the
The
quartering of the eagle has generally been said to be for Ramsay, but no intermarriage with that family is proved Mr Riddell, while re" marking this, adds, the bearing of the eagle is not properly explained." Thomas de Lestalric was Sheriff of Edinburgh in the beginning of ;
thirteenth century, to the Logans.
and
in 1225
was proprietor of Hailes, which descended
In 1296 Johan de Lastalirik, of the county of Edinburgh, did homage In the Record Office there is a detached seal of Simon de to Edward I. Lasalric with an eagle displayed, so there is hardly room to doubt that the Logans acquired Restalrig or Lestarrick, in the fourteenth century, by marriage with the heiress of the old family, who took their name from it. the last notice of the Lestalrics, and in 1398 Sir Robert lord of Lestalric.
1382 is
is
Logan
1296 Wautier Logan, Thurbrand de Logan, of the county of Dumfries, and Wautier Logan of Lanarkshire, did homage to Edward I. detached seal of Walter Logan in the Record Office, probably appended to the deed of homage, has three piles in point. Hutton gives a seal of Robert Logan of Restalrik, 1279 (?), with the same bearings, which were also used in 1440 by Robert of Restalrig, and In
A
1504-10 by Sir John of Restalrig. In 1565 John, a cadet, uses the same with a mullet in base. In 1513 John Logan's seal is first and fourth, three piles; second and In 1542 the bearings on the seal of Robert, third, a boar's head erased. son and apparent heir of Sir Robert of Restalrig, were first and fourth,
—
—
WORKMAN'S three piles in point
;
MS.
second, an eagle displayed
;
third, three
177 papingoes
for Pepdie.
The same
bearings are carved at Restalrig on the tombstone of Janet Ker, Lady Restalrig, who died in 1526, impaled with Ker of
Ancrum. seems established that the
It thus
should be in point that the heart is a seventeenth century addition, although Nisbet seems to say that it was on a seal of 1398 lastly, that the eagle is for Restalrig. The only entry in the Lyon Register is, Mr George Logan of that Ilk, CO. Ayr, 1672-78 or, three passion nails meeting at the points and piercing through a man's heart gules. At a very early period the Logans held lands in Ayrshire James was Sheriff-depute 1539, but George, in 1600, is the first met with designed of that Ilk. Hugh, the last of the piles
;
;
—
;
family, the well-known witty laird of Logan, sold the estate and died unmarried in 1802. His sister, Mrs Goodlet-Campbell, inherited the properties of Burnhead and Hillar.
Adam
de Logan witnessed a charter of Alexander II., c. 1235, to the church of Scone. His descendants possessed Malles in Gowrie, and made grants to the monastery of Scone. Sir Robert is said to have married a daughter of Robert II., and to have had a charter, in 1395, of the barony of Grougar in Ayrshire from Robert III., dilecto fratri nostra. " Nisbet's Heraldry." The Logans held lands in that county as well as in the Carse of Gowrie, in addition to their chief seat of Restalrig, for many generations. Restalrig sat in parliament 1543-60. Fast Castle, with Gunsgreen, Nether Ayton, &c., was acquired by marriage with a coheiress of Home, and her descent from the heiress of the Pepdies accounts for the arms of the latter family being quartered by
Logan of
Restalrig.
Sir Robert of Restalrig, Admiral of Scotland, founded the monastery of St Anthony at Leith, and died 6th March 1439, on which day mass was sung there for the souls of himself, dame Katherine, his spouse, their
predecessors and successors. Robert Logan of Restalrig was, by correspondence, implicated in the Gowrie plot, but died before July 1607, and the discovery was only made by the confession of Sprott, the votary, in 1608 upon this Logan's body was exhumed, and, after a trial, at which his eldest son Robert, then a minor, was summoned but did not appear, sentence of forfeiture for treason was " " were declared to be his name, memory, and dignitie pronounced ;
;
"
and deleitt furth and lands were forfeited goods and escheat, and his posterity pronounced unable to possess or enjoy any offices, lands, &c. He had, between 1597 and 1605, sold nearly all extinct
and
abolisheit,
and his armes
of the buikis of armes and nobilitie ;
"
cancellat, rivine,
his
his lands.
Nisbet says that the baron of Restalrig left two sons, George and John, who went abroad, that the elder died, the younger returned, possessed part of Restalrig, and was ancestor of the Logans of Burncastle in 2
Y
WORKMAN'S
178
MS.
His pedigree seems far wrong in the first place, Robert was the name of the son and heir. A family in the United States claimed descent from a Patrick Logan, said to be son of the traitor. On the 2nd of April 1616, the forfeiture of Robert of Restalrig was reversed in favour of his lawful children, Alexander, Janet, and Ann, except as regards their claim to the succession of their late father, which seems to show that the eldest son was dead, and that these were the only Lauderdale.
;
survivors.
The
ancestor of Burncastle was certainly a John Logan, portioner of Restalrig, who in 16 13 was dilated for hearing mass in Edinburgh in 1609, the date at which his alleged elder brother was under age. Then
had a brother Archibald who, in 1645, was young daughters of George Logan of BurnAs George married in 1640, it seems impossible that castle, son of John. a could be son of he. younger son of Robert of Restalrig. Nisbet farther makes George, above named, acquire Burncastle by marriage with Isobel, daughter of Ludovick Fowler of that place. The Fowlers do not appear to have owned Burncastle at all George Logan of Burncastle married the " portioner of only child who left issue of Captain Ludovick Fowler, this John, the portioner, served tutor to the three
;
Restalrig."
When
John was
in difficulties in
16 13, his cautioner was
Andrew
Logan of Coitfield, son and successor of John of Coitfield, proprietor of lands in the barony of Restalrig, who may have been his brother. The family seem to have been an old branch of Restalrig, and among the persons for whom the monks of St Anthony said mass were William of Coitfield and Annabel, his wife, and Patrick of Coitfield and In 1520 Robert of Coitfield was Provost of Edinburgh. his wife Janet. Andrew of Coitfield was, in 1609, found free from all concern in the plot, Coitfield
and from all prejudice that he might suffer by the forfeiture of his chief and superior. Ramsay of Dahovse. L. an eagle displayed is the bearing on a detached seal of William de Rameseye, probably appended to his deed of ;
homage In
to
Edward L
in 1296.
40 1 James de Ramsay uses the same, with a unicorn's head for crest, and two griffins as supporters. There are instances of the eagle being two headed. William, Earl of Fife, in 1358 has the eagle surmounted of a bendlet engrailed. In 1296 no less than eleven persons of the name swore fealty to the King of England two from the county of Edinburgh, five from Fife, two from Berwick, one from Angus, and one from Argyll. Simon de Ramsay witnessed charters in the reigns of Malcolm and William the Lyon, and from that time the name is often met with. Sir Alexander of Dalhousie, Sheriff of Teviotdale and keeper of Roxburghe Castle, was starved to death in Hermitage Castle by the knight of Liddesdale. In 1359 Robert was Sheriff of Forfar, and William Sheriff of Edinburgh. Alexander of Dalhousie sat in the general council 1440, and his grandson. Sir Alexander, in parliament 1471-81. In the begin1
—
WORKMAN'S
MS.
179
—
ning of the seventeenth century the family consisted of three brothers, Sir George of Dalhousie, who was created Lord Ramsay 1618 Sir John, who took a prominent part in the rescue of James VI. from the Gowrie conspirators, and was created, in 1606, Viscount of Haddington, and in 1620 Earl of Holderness in England and James, who went to Sweden in 1614, with recommendations from James Baron Spens, Swedish Ambassador in London, whose daughter he afterwards married. There was also a daughter, Alice, a legatee under the will of her brother the Earl. The arms, crest, and supporters, which are on the seal of James Ramsay 1401, continue the bearing of the Earl of Dalhousie. Cuthbert Ramsay, Captain of Crichton Castle, younger son of Nicholas of Dalhousie, married, c. 1552, Agnes Stewart, Countess of Bothwell. Herring of Gilmerton. F. Walter de Hayeroun was clericus ;
;
;
regis 1178-80.
John Heryng fought with "
distinction for
David H.
The
"
Memorie
contains a notice of his descendants, and of a domestic tragedy which brought the family nearly to ruin. He had a Crown of the of Glasclune in Perthshire, and charter, forty-first David H., barony other grants from that king and from Robert H. Paton was taken prisoner Patrick was a hostage in England 1340. Patrick and John were both of the household of at Neville's Cross. of the Somervilles
daughter of Sir John Herring, is stated to have married Sir Walter Somerville in 1372, bringing him half the lands of Gilmerton. The other half remained with the male line of the Herrings till the seventeenth century, and they also held Glasclune, Lethendy, Cluny, Tulliebole, Little Blair, Callie, &c., intermarrying with the Earls of Athole, Lords Gray, Crichton of Cairnes, and other families. David of Lethendy sat in parliament 1607, but soon after this the
Queen Joan.
Giles,
family declined.
In Northumberland the Herons of Hadston, Bokenfield, Ford, and Chipchase, long held a considerable position barons by tenure from the reign of John till 1296, barons by writ of summons 137 1 and 1393, baronets 1662. Their bearing three herons, or a chevron between thrfee herons differs entirely from that of the Herrings of Scotland, but it is from the English family that the Herons in the stewartry of KirkcudThe coat they carry, however, seems rather to bright claim descent. it is indicate a community of origin with the northern family argent, two lions rampant affrontde, supporting between their forepaws a rose gules stalked and leaved vert. Two herons proper were allowed as sup;
—
—
;
Heron, styled of that Ilk. Various and contradictory accounts are given of the origin of the Herons in Scotland, but it is at least certain that their family property of Kirouchtree has been in their possession for upwards of three centuries.
porters, in 1767, to Patrick
the designation was changed to, of that Ilk. Stuart Mary, daughter and heir of Patrick of Heron, M.P. for the Stewartry, by Lady Elizabeth Cochrane, his wife, married, in 1802, Sir John Maxwell of
About 1700
WORKMAN'S
^8o
MS.
surname and arms of Her ladyship, in 1851, executed an entail, under which her Heron. second surviving son inherited the estates and took the name and arms of Springkell,
Bart.,
who assumed
the additional
Heron.
A quasi recognition of
the alleged English origin of the Kirouchtree line took place early in the last century. William, said to be a son of Ford, settled in Lincolnshire, and was father of Sir John of Cressy Hall,
Treasurer of the
Henry VHI., whose descendant, Sir left a son and two daughters, Henry Heron of Anne Lady county of Lincoln, who d.s.p. 1730
Chamber
Edward, K.B. 1603, Cressy, M.P. for the
to
;
Eraser of Durris, co. Kincardine, who d.s.p. 1769 and Dorothy, married Erancis Fane of Fulbeck, and had one son, who d.s.p. Mr Henry Heron, having no near relatives of his own name, settled ;
his estates, failing issue of his sister and nephew, on Patrick Heron of Kirouchtree, M.P. for Kirkcudbright, whose grandson, Patrick of Heron above named, succeeded on the death of Lady Eraser. It was a condition in the will of Mr Henry Heron that his arms
should be quartered, and this was repeated in the entail made by the late Lady Heron-Maxwell, but the arms recorded by the Rev. Michael Max-
well-Heron are those of Heron of Heron alone. not
now
The Cressy
estates are
in possession of this family.
Sinclair of Roslin. L., no mullet. A cross engrailed is the only charge on the seal of Sir William de Sancto Claro 1292, and the same
was recorded by James Sinclair of Roslin 1672-78. Henry de Sancto Clero was present in the court of William the Lyon at Edinburgh, a.d. i 180. Henry and Alan de Sainclair are witnesses to a Five persons of the charter of William de Morville a few years later. name swore fealty to Edward L Sir Henry of Roslin was one of the barons of Scotland who, in 1320, addressed a letter to the Pope. Many fables have sprung up in connection with the history of this great and ancient race, such as their possession of Roslin in the reign of of Oldenburgh, and Hereditary Grand Master Masons of Scotland from the reign of James H. " See Father Hay's Genealogie of the Sainteclaires of Rosslyn," edited by James Maidment, advocate. The original charter, 14th September, thirty-first Alexander HL, of
David L,
their being
Dukes
the lands of Roskelyn and Cattekon to Sir William de St Clair, on the resignation of Henry de Roskelyn, is printed in the chartulary of Newbottle.
Sir William was justiciary of Galloway and sheriff of four counties. Sir Henry of Roslin survived his sons. Sir William and John, who both lost their lives in Spain on the expedition with the heart of Robert
Bruce.
His grandson and successor, William, was Earl of Orkney. William, Earl of Orkney and Caithness, founder in 1446 of the Collegiate Church of Roslin, resigned the former earldom to the Crown in 1470, and had several sons, of whom the eldest was ancestor of the Lords Sinclair, the
WORKMAN'S
MS.
i8i
second was Earl of Caithness, and the third Sir Oliver of Roslin, PentIt has been said land, and Herbertshire sat in parliament 1485-87. that Sir Oliver was elder brother of the Earl of Caithness, but the mullet long borne is the mark of cadency of the third son. Oliver of Roslin sat in parliament 1505, William in 1560, and Sir
William
in 1584.
A
younger son of Roslin was Oliver Sinclair of Pitcarnis and Whytekirk, Captain of Tantallon Castle, the favourite of James V., who, in 1542, gave him a tack of the Crown property in Orkney and Shetland. Henry of Whytekirk married Eupheme, daughter and coheir of Eupheme Makcalzean, Lady of Cliftonhall, who was burnt for witchcraft in 1 59 1. The heiress of this branch married Captain Ramsay, and was mother of the sixth Earl of Dalhousie. John of Roslin defended his castle against General Monk, and after it was much damaged and taken, was kept a prisoner at Tynemouth for a considerable time, and the family was nearly ruined. Jean Spottiswoode, Lady Roslin, in various petitions to parliament Crown, pathetically sets forth the sales of extensive estates, that the remaining small part of the estate is heavily burdened, that the crops and wood had been cut, and that with her large family she had hardly a bed to lie on.
and
to the
last of Roslin, sold the last
fragment of his inheritance, and died in January 1778, leaving an only child, Sarah, who died unmarried. As the representation has been a matter in dispute, it will be convenient to show the last generations in a tabular form ; the statement of the William,
Cavaliere Ciccopieri is printed in italics. Mr Bower, in 1854, obtained the Royal licence to assume the additional surname of St Clair, and in 1852 registered the arms of St Clair and Bower quarterly.
JAMES SINCLAIR Alexander
of Rosm. Jean, daugh. of Robert, Lord SempilL
of Roslin, m.
Thomas Sinclair,
lin,
William
of Roslin,
James, an
officer in the
««.CORDELIA,daugh.
and coheir of Col.
JEAN,
m. Elizabeth, daugh. of Captain Francis Wauchope, younger son of Niddrie Marischal.
Francis, an officer in the Spanish d.s.p. Entered the Spanish service c. 17 lo, was Colonel of a
French
army.
Sir
daughter of Sir Henry Spottiswoode.
George Wishart of Cliftonhall, Bart died
married.
un-
Bower
m.
Alex.
regiment at Naples.
Meathie and Kincaldrum.
of
I
Antonio St Clair.
Sarah,
Margaret,
army,
Thomas, died unmar.
Lt.-Colonel
James
Bower
of
Meathie and Kincaldrum.
I
Sinclair, 87th Re-
Alex.
I
ment of Foot, was
Francesco St
served heir special of his cousin, Wil-
Clair, d.s.p. 1778.
liam, last of Roslin, in 1786 ; d.s.p. at
Gabriela Maria St Clair, m. Niccolo
Graham
Ciccopieri of
sold his estates.
Naples.
\
Bower, \
Alexander BowERSt Clair,
Madeira, 23rd Sep-
resident
Lithuania, was served heir of line
in
tember 1817.
and
in general to William, last of Roslin, 1 7th March 1 852.
Cavaliere Enrico Ciccopieri, Major in the Italian the additional surname of St Clair, and was, 15th June 1865, served heir of hne general of Lieut.Colonel James Sinclair, the last heir male of Roslin. This service is incompatible with the former one by Mr
Army, assumed
Bower.
No
supporters have been registered, but the barons of Roslin long
bore a mermaid holding a trident and a 2 z
griffin.
WORKMAN'S
182
Pennycuik OF YT Ilk.
L.;
MS.
Hughe, Huwe, and Margaret de Peni-
cok, of the county of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296. The same bearings are on a seal of George Pennycuik 1473. As 1672-78, by Alexander of Newhall, the field is or and the registered,
horns are stringed and garnished gules. Argent appears thus to have " been the original field, as Porteus, in 1662, blazons argent aliter or." The barony from which this family took its name was in their when W. de Penycook is one of possession in the reign of Alexander II., the persons directed to fix the extent of the lands of Lethenhope, and soon after Sir David de Penicoke is named. Alexander, named above, sold the estate about 1646, and settled at Newhall, which, on his death at the age of ninety, descended to his son Alexander, who had acquired Romanno in Peeblesshire by marriage with He was author of a " Description of Margaret Murray in 1676.
Tweeddale," and of Poems, and died in 1722, leaving two daughters, married to Oliphant of Lanton and Farquharson of Aboyne.
Wardlaw this
Wardlaw of Richartoune. Scotland several places named Wardlaw, from which
of yt Ilk.
L., as
There are in surname may have been derived, but there
Wardlaws of that Ilk. Wardlaw had a charter from Robert Henry
is
no evidence of the
existence of
of half the barony of Wilton, CO. Roxburgh, which remained in possession of the family for I.
several generations.
Walter was Bishop of Glasgow 1368, a Cardinal in 1385, and died His seal, 1368, has a fess between three mascles and charged in 1387. with three crosses supporters two lions. His nephew, Henry, Bishop of St Andrews 1404-40, had on his seal, 1419, two shields, the one charged with three mascles, the other having a fess between three cross crosslets fitch6e, and charged with three mascles, Lochore, co. Fife, was acquired by marriage with the heiress of Valange, and on the seal of Sir
—
;
Henry of Torry, water bougets
for
1444, are three mascles for Wardlaw quartering three Valange ; crest a boar's head couped.
—
Thomas de Wardlaw
sat in parliament 1369, Justice-depute in 1589.
Henry of Torry
in
and James was Henry, last of Torry, was dead in 1619, leaving two daughters, Elizabeth and Janet. 1560,
The heads
of
the
Wardlaw
family styled themselves baron of
Inchgaw, otherwise Lochorshire. of principal cadet in Fife is the existing family of Wardlaw Pitreavie, the published accounts of which are not correct. Henry
The
Chamberlain to Queen Anne, married Elizabeth Wilson, daughter of a merchant in Edinburgh. They had charters of mill of Balmule 1596, tenandry of Balmule 1603. He was knighted before 1614, when he had a charter of Pitreavie and a gift of a pension of ;^iooo was created a baronet 1631, with a charter of the barony of Wardlaw in Nova Scotia died 5th April 1637. Sir Henry, second baronet, married, first, Margaret Bethune, a daughter of the Balfour family, and died 2nd March 1653.
Wardlaw,
;
;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
183
Pitreavie was sold early in last century, but Balmule remained for some time longer in the possession of the family. The arms registered, 1672-78, by Sir Henry of Pitreavie, baronet, were first and fourth, azure, three mascles or second and third, azure,
—
three water bougets or
—
crest
;
;
^an estoile
or
motto
;
—
"
Familias firmat
pietasT Sir Archibald died, unmarried, 29th January 1874, and it is understood that the title has devolved on the grandson of his uncle Henry, now Sir Henry Wardlaw, baronet.
The
next branch of the family, formerly seated at Abden, co. Fife, descended from John, younger son of the first baronet, is represented by Robert Balfour Wardlaw- Ramsay of Whitehill, co. Edinburgh, who, in 1849, registered the arms of Ramsay, quartering Wardlaw as Pitreavie,
with a crescent argent for
difference.
of West Reston, co. Berwick, descended of Torry, a bordure engrailed or the coheiresses, about mascles within the bore the middle of the seventeenth century, were Alison, wife of Andrew Burnett, advocate Magdalene, wife of Robert Hamilton, merchant,
The Wardlaws
;
;
and Joanna. Robert HI., in the second year of his reign, granted a charter of Riccarton and Warriston, in the barony of Currie, to Marion Wardlaw, widow of Gilbert Wardlaw, and to Andrew, their son. The male line of this branch ended on the death of Richard of Warriston in 1595, leaving a daughter, Agnes Wardlaw of Warriston, living 1607. Stacie says Warriston bore the fess argent and charged with one rose.
Edinburgh
;
To
this line probably belonged the Wardlaws of Kilbaberton, near Currie; the seal of Henry of Kilbaberton, 1530, has the fess between three mascles and charged with a mullet between two crescents. 74.
Fairle of Braid.
L.
;
instead of a ribbon engrailed there
is
a
—a
a mullet gules ; added in ink, crest " I am redde ; supporter on the dexter a hound collared. The coat recorded, 1672-78, by Richard of Braid is or, a lion rampant gules holding a star azure between his forepaws, over all a bendlet gules; crest a unicorn's head couped; motto " I am readie;" no supporters entered, but Stacie, about the same date, gives two spaniels. Braid, as early as 1639, was held by Sir William Dick, so this Richard ribbon sinister
;
in dexter chief
unicorn's head erased
motto
—
"
—
was only representer of the
;
—
—
—
Fairlies.
has been said that this family descends from a natural son of Robert H., and the arms favour this theory. William Fairlie, who had been one of the custumars of Edinburgh in 1342, had a grant as a reward It
Edinburgh, and is named in the Rolls as as Exchequer 1329. early William Fairlie had a charter of Innerleith from Robert I., and Braid was held by William Fairlie in the reign of Robert H., when he
for his share in taking the Castle of
It is plain, thereresigned Bavelaw to his son John upon his marriage. fore, that the royal origin, if true at all, must be thrown back to an earlier
date.
1
WORKMAN'S
84
MS.
Robert of Braid sat in convention 1567, and Alexander in parliament The Fairlies retained the barony of Braid till the reign of Charles 1597. I., when the head of the family was Sir Robert. Alexander, son and apparent heir of Robert of Braid, was contracted in marriage, 7th April 1584, with Martha, daughter of John Knox, the reformer, and had several children.
About the time that the family of Braid declined, an Edinburgh burgess, John Fairlie, probably a descendant, appears as owner of Bruntsfield and of lands in Restalrig his son William was knighted. ;
William of Bruntsfield registered arms, 1672-78, resembling those of Braid or, a lion rampant and in chief three stars gules crest a lion's head couped or motto " Paratus sum^ He acquired Little Dreghorn, co. Ayr, and Bruntsfield was sold. His son William executed an entail in 1703 of the Ayrshire estate, and had a Crown charter erecting his lands into the barony of Fairlie. The male line of this family ended in 1803, on the death of Alex-
—
—
;
—
;
ander Fairlie of Fairlie, when the estate passed to his sister Margaret, wife of Sir William Cunningham of Robertland, Bart., by whose descendant it has lately been sold. In the parish of Largs there was another family of Fairlie, taking their surname from their lands, and bearing an entirely different coat argent, or or, a chevron between three water bougets sable. Rauf Faireye
—
(?
Fairleye) of the county of Ayr,
was probably ancestor of ning of
who
this line,
signed the
which retained
Ragman
Roll in 1296, the begin-
its estate till
last century.
Falckner.
An addition in ink,
a chevron between three falcons' heads
erased.
Crechtoun of Brounstoun. L.; ermine, a lion rampant azure, which agrees with Forman and Balfour. Porteus gives both coats. 75.
William de Crichton had the lands of Braidwood in Mid-Lothian from David de Pennycuk, and obtained a Crown charter of confirmation fifth Robert H. Margaret, his widow, had a charter of Gilbertoun, in the same county, 14 10. After the middle of the fifteenth century these lands were possessed by John of Brunston. Alexander of Brunston was forfeited for treason 1548, but after his death the decree was reduced 1558, at the instance of his son and successor, John of Brunston. In 1592 John of Brunston, with consent of his spouse, Margaret Adamson of the Craigcrook family, and of his son James, and Jean Fairlie his spouse, sold Gilbertoun for 40,000 merks to Jean Fleming, Lady Thirlestane. James was served heir of his father in 1608, and had sold Brunston before his death. In 1637 his son David, then resident in Ireland, was served heir to him in annual-rents over the mills of Musselburgh. In 1609 Abraham Crichton, brother of the laird of Brunston, had a grant of two thousand acres of land in Ulster, Thomas of Brunston being cautioner for him.
Thomas was certainly not
the head of the family at that date, but
may
WORKMAN'S
MS.
185
have been a son of the last laird. The Earl of Erne appears to be the He carries argent, a lion rampant descendant o/ the settler in Ireland. azure, but the arms in the Funeral Entry in Ulster's Office, 1669, of Mary, eldest daughter and coheir of George Creighton, wife of Randall Adams of Ledwichstown, co. West Meath, are those given for Brunston in L.
MouBRAY OF Barnbougall.
L.
the crown
;
is
an antique one.
The
seals of Geoffrey in 1292, and Sir Roger in the reign of Robert I., are a lion rampant with a label in chief, and in 1564 that of John of Barnbougall is a lion rampant uncrowned. The crown, however, is on
those of John 151 1 and Barbara 1534, both of Barnbougall; the first has a stork's head as crest. Philippa, heiress of the family, married Sir Bartholomew de Loen, and they had a charter from David II. of the barony of Dalmeny. seal of Philippa, in 1395, gives her
husband's,
three eagles'
own arms
heads
—a
erased
;
A
lion rampant, impaled with her supporters two lions sejant
—
gardant.
Robert Barton, who married Barbara Moubray, lady of Barnbougal, and assumed her surname and arms, quartered three bars wavy with the crowned lion of Moubray on his seal 1534. Latterly, the Moubray coat has been alone borne by the family and its cadets, and Nisbet gives as supporters a man and woman. Cockairny, in Fife, has been the seat of an existing branch, now probably heir male of the marriage of Philippa and Sir Bartholomew de Loen, for nearly four hundred years. Philip de Moubray sat in curia regis 1208, and there seems no doubt that he was a younger son of the great English house of Mowbray, afterwards Dukes of Norfolk. In Charles' Roll of English Arms, the coat of Roger de Mowbray, in the latter half of the thirteenth century, is gules, a lion rampant argent, which is quartered by the Howards, and agrees with the earliest seal of the Moubrays in Scotland. Roger sat in council c. 1255, and was Sheriff of Edinburgh, Linlithgow, and Haddington. Sir Geoffrey, in 1294, was Justiciary of Lothian, and owned the manor of Bolton in Northumberland. For their adherence to the Baliols, a large part of their lands were forfeited.
Moubray of Barnbougall sat The elder line parted with
in parliament 1484-88. their estates early in the seventeenth
Francis was accused of a plot century, having suffered in various ways. against James VI., and of counterfeiting Cecil's writing ; in trying to escape from Edinburgh Castle he lost his life in 1603, and his body was exposed on the gibbet. Several ladies of the family belonged to the household of
them becoming wife of Gilbert Curie, and she and her sister were in receipt of pensions from the King of Spain. Walter had gone to Spain in 1600. Philip was forced to leave Scotland in 1601,
Queen Mary, one
and
of
James had been for ten years a prisoner at Westminster. Fawsyde of that Ilk. L. seal of Roger de Fausyde, 1326 a
at that time
—
;
3
A
1
WORKMAN'S
86
MS.
The surname is taken from Fawsyde, CO. Haddington, and Alan de Fawsyde is named in the chartulary of Soltre c. 1 200. John of Fawsyde sat in parliament 1467. The heiress of the chief line married Sir William Douglas of Kelhead George Fawsyde of Cowthropple left three coheiresses in 1624, crane within a bordure engrailed.
;
of
whom Janet married John Ker of Lochtour. Murray of Darnhall. Blackbarony is added. GiFFORD OF Sheriffhall.
L.
F.
ermine, three bars gules, a bordure
;
of the second.
Stewart of Craigiehall. 76. Lawson. crescent.
Sable,
*Orrok of that that Ilk, CO.
Fife—
L.
on a chevron between three garbs argent a
Arms
1672-78 by Alexander of sable, on a chevron or between three mullets argent as Ilk.
registered
many chess rooks of the field. Symon de Oroc witnessed
a charter in 1248; in 1296 Symund and Robert de Orrok of the county of Fife swore fealty to Edward I. The original estate in Fife, which was erected into a barony in the seventeenth century, was sold and lands in Aberdeenshire acquired, to which the .
name of Orrok was given they are still in the possession of the family. M'CuLLOCH OF Cardiness, added in ink. L. Balfour of Montquhanie. L. a saltire couped sable in base. 77. Hepburn of Rikertoun. Hepburn with a buckle in base. ;
;
Lyddell. L, the stars are not pierced. Bynning of that Ilk. L. seal of Simon de Beny 1399 a bend engrailed between a star of six points in chief and a crescent in base. James Binning of Carlowriehaugh, advocate, registered arms 1672-78
—
;
;
—argent, on a bend engrailed sable a waggon of the head furnished with furniture a waggon motto—
first
;
crest
—a horse's
"
Virtute dologue." The arms entered in 1675 by Sir William of Walliford, Provost of Edinburgh, have the waggon or and a bordure sable. William de Binin was prior of Newbottle, and afterwards abbot of for
;
Cupar.
Wawane
of Steinston.
L.
Balfour of Carristoun.
L.
second son of George Lord Seton,
Seton of Touch.
The name
;
the heiress Isabel married John,
p. 27.
a later hand, and the first entry is obliterated. vert, a lion rampant with a plumed helmet on his head This may be a variation of the coat given in L. for Touch of that Ilk.
Arms—
Ramsay of Eastbarns.
is in
Arms
nearly obliterated. Lindsay of Dowhill. L. ; the base, instead of having two bars wavy or, is nearly covered with a representation of water with waves, and 78.
in base
a crescent argent this nearly agrees with the entry in the Lyon Register for John of Dowhill, 1673. One of the oldest branches of the house of Lindsay, being descended ;
from Sir William of Rossie, Crambeth, and Logic, younger brother of David, first Earl of Crawford now represented by David Baird Lindsay, ;
Esq.
WORKMAN'S Sleich of Sleichis Houses two serpents gliding proper.
(?)
MS.
187
Or, three piles sable, and in base
—
Seal of Richard Sleich, 1431 a bend, and in sinister chief a buckle Patrick, in 1473, uses a bend sinister between two fleurs-de-lis, and
charged with as
many
Houses
;
buckles.
Berwickshire.
Sleich of Cumledge, in that county, ended in an heiress in the latter part of the sixteenth century, Jean, wife of Archibald Auchinleck. Sleichis
is
in
John Sleich of Glengelt, Provost of Haddington, who long sat in parliament, left a son, Mr John of Glengelt, who d.s.p., and two daughters, Agnes, who married Mr Henry Cockburn, and her son, in 1695, was served heir of his uncle and grandfather and Christian, wife of Mr John ;
Robertson. In 1329 Christian Sleich had a gift from the King, *M'MoRRAN OF Glaspane. This, with a bordure for difference and the hand a dexter one, was registered 1672-78 by John, late bailie of Edinburgh, whose great-grand father was a son of the above family. Porteus has two mullets instead of the mullet and crescent James of Newhall in Fife died about 1645, leaving a daughter and heir, Anne, who married in 1661 Sir George Campbell of Cessnock, and was mother of Margaret, wife of Alexander, Earl of Marchmont. In the Funeral Escutcheons of this family the charges in flank are spur rowels, and there is sometimes a plain bordure. Ninian was a commissioner on the coinage 1599.
John, Bailie of Edinburgh, was killed in 1595 by William Sinclair, afterwards Sir William of Mey, then a boy at the High School of Edinburgh, when trying to suppress a riot there. Glaspane in Lanarkshire was the property of the family for several
name occurs in that county in the fifteenth century. Ker of Samuelston. L. L. this coat, without the mullet, 79. Maknaught of that Ilk. was registered by John M' Naught of Kilquharitie 1672-78. Fergus M'Nauch of Culconnady, and John M'Nauch of Craigow,
generations, and the
;
in 1643 Nicolas, wife of Robert Lennox of and of provision of her brother, Roger was of line heir Dursdow, M'Naucht of Kilquhanitie, but the estate remained in the male line of the family for nearly a hundred years longer there was another sister, Sarah, wife of Samuel Lockhart, merchant burgess of Edinburgh.
were on an assize 1448;
;
Gilberd
Edward
I,
Roger
Makenaght, of the county of Dumfries, swore
in 1296. sat in parliament for
fealty to
Edinburgh 1593-98.
In the seventeenth century a family of merchant- burgesses of the name of Macmath flourished in Edinburgh, and the arms assigned to them in Funeral Escutcheons sable, a chevron checquy argent and azurebetween three lions' heads erased of the second are certainly founded on M' Naught. They intermarried with the Kinlochs, Trotters, Dicks, and
—
other families of rich merchants in Edinburgh.
—
1
WORKMAN'S
88
MS,
Some
of the Kilquhanitie family were merchant burgesses and bailies of Edinburgh about the same time. In 1593 James Makmath graduated at the University there. Ogston of that Ilk. F.
Ballandene. There is added, of Auchnoule. L. the seal of Sir James of Broughton, 1604, has a thistle as crest supporters two female
—
;
;
figures emblematical of peace and justice. To his son William, who was created
Lord Bellenden, the arms were confirmed in 1668, with the addition of the Royal tressure; crest a hart's head couped with a cross between his tynes or; motto ^' Sic itur ad " astra;" another motto is added in W., Ditat servata fides'' Ballantyne of that Ilk, otherwise Bannatyne azure, a cross between a crescent in the first quarter, and three mullets, one in each of the On the seal of James, burgess of Edinburgh 1549, other quarters, or. See L. the crescent is in the fourth quarter.
—
—
—
John of Corhouse,
co.
—argent, a
Lanark, registered arms 1672-78
cross between four mullets azure.
—
Ninian of Kames, in Bute, at the same time recorded gules, a chevron argent between three mullets or supporters ; two angels proper winged or. This family, latterly designed of that Ilk, ended in an heiress, Isabella, who married Roderick M'Leod of Sunbank, and was mother of William ;
M'Leod Bannatyne of Bannatyne, who, in 1795, was allowed to quarter the arms and bear the supporters he was afterwards a Senator of the College of Justice and was knighted, sold Kames and d.s.p. 1833. Corhouse was in the possession of John de Bennachtyne about 1360 it was sold by Sir John Ballantyne of Crookdike, in Cumberland, son of ;
;
John, whose arms are recorded. Jane, heiress of Crookdike, married Lawson Dykes, Esq., and is represented by L. F. Ballantine-Dykes of Dovenby Hall in Cumberland. Thomas Bannatyne of Newtyle 1577, and James of Newhall 1626, were Senators of the College of Justice George Bannatyne was of their ;
family.
Park of that
Ilk. L. the stags' heads are cabossed. George descended of the of Foulfurdlees, family of Parkswells, registered arms 1672-78 or, a fess checquy gules and argent between three bucks' heads Arms entered at the same cabossed, within a bordure of the second. time for James Park, are composed with Eraser seemingly, as the field is ;
—
azure and three fraises take the place of the bucks' heads. He is probably the Mr James Park alias Eraser of Clocharbie, who, in 167 1, was served In a birthbrief granted by Sir heir general of his daughter Barbara. Alexander Erskine, Lyon, one of the quarters is Park, or, a chevron checquy azure and argent between three bucks' heads erased gules. Sir John de Park was Deputy-Constable in 1264. Robert II., in the fourth year of his reign, confirmed a charter of John, Earl of Carrick, to John de Park, of various lands in the barony of Kilbride. In 1296 Sir John de Park, of the county of Berwick, swore fealty to Edward I.
—
WORKMAN'S Sprewll of Coldoun.
MS,
189
before 1308 Walter Spreuil witnessed a charter by Malcolm, Earl of Lennox; 1366 Walter Sprovll pays the contribution of the barony of Glasgow. L.
;
Walter was steward of Malcolm, Earl of Lennox, from whom he had charters of Dalchorne and Dalmore, which remained in possession of his descendants
till
about 1620.
John sat in parliament for Renfrew 1579. Leslie of Balquhane. Argent, on a
80.
fess azure three buckles
base a crescent gules. This coat without the crescent was registered, 1672-78, by Alexander of Balquhain there are no supporters, but two griffins were borne by the Counts Leslie. It is remarkable in the Leslie family that the Earls of Rothes, Lords Lindores, and Lords Newark also bore griffins as supporters. The Leslies of Wardes assumed the same, and two griffins appear as supporters on a monument of Leslie of Findrassie, c. 1600. Porteus gives the arms of Balquhain Leslie between two fleurs-deLeslie within a double tressure lis azure; and for the Lord of Leslie Stacie gives the same for Leslie of that Ilk, with two griffins gules. or, in
;
—
—
proper as supporters. The seal of Sir Norman de Lecelin, 1292,
CONGELTOUN OF YATT IlK. L. Forbes of Fetterquharne, Azure, a (?)
is
three buckles on a bend,
fess or
between three bears'
heads couped. 81.
fealty to
*CoRSEiR OF YT Ilk. Nicol Cosour of Berwickshire, 1296, swore Edward I. Adam Cosour was, in 1360, one of the collectors of
contributions from that shire.
Adam
Cosour sat in parliament 1467-69. Robert I. granted charters to Henry Cosur, or Henry called Cosure, of lands in Bondington and Lamberton, co. Berwick David II., in the ;
thirty- second year of his reign, confirmed to his Macer, Adam Cossour,, lands in Eyemouth. Robert II., in the third year of his reign, granted to Henry, son of John Cossour, the lands of Otterburn, on his father's
resignation.
These bearings supported by two angels are on the seal of John, Bishop of Glasgow 1477. On the tombstone to Mr John, Keeper of the Signet, who died 1614,
*Laing of yt Ilk.
in the Greyfriars' Churchyard, Edinburgh, is cut this quartered coat, but the piles are in point. Niel was Keeper of the Signet 1581. See Plate
of Morisland.
for the coat registered, 1672-78,
A
by James, portioner —argent, three point grant of the present century Porteus gives the name—parted per pale argent and sable a chief 98
piles in
is
sable,
,
for
indented counterchanged. 1296,
Edward
William Lang, of the county of Berwick, swore
fealty to
I.
Thomas Laing engages David II. Thomas sat
In 1357
ransom of
that Dumfries shall pay part of the in 3 B
parliament 1463, and
Mr
John,
WORKMAN'S
I90
rector of Southwick, in 1471
;
the last
MS.
was the Bishop, who was
also
Lord
High Treasurer
1470-74. John, Keeper of the Signet, was proprietor of Spittells or Reidhe married Robert Dennistoun, and called Reidhouse spittell, afterwards had an only child, Jean, who married, c. 1609, Sir Andrew Hamilton, a ;
Senator of the College of Justice her lands were erected in his favour into the barony of Reidhouse. Arms on monument at Cairn in Aberdeenshire, of " Jhone Laing, baron of Noth, who died in March 1624, he vas sonne to Jhone Laing in ;
Three battle-axes. *Laitties of yt Ilk, This name generally takes the form of Lautie
Barflett."
or Lawtie in the MSS. Another blazon makes the
fess
gules surmounting the piles and
charged with three crescents or. The burgh of Cullen was represented in parliament by James Lawtie 1633,
and by George 1646.
Adam
Lautie, writer to the signet, was proprietor of the tenandry of Sauchtonhall, in which he was succeeded by his son, Mr James, advocate, Mr James Lautie, father of Mr Adam, portioner of Sauchtonhall 1633. advocate in Edinburgh, appears a few years later as heir to his cousin in
property there. The lands of Laithis in Ayrshire, from which the surname was taken, were granted to the Fullartons on the resignation of Thomas Laithis of that Ilk,
c.
1350.
the chevron is ensigned with a cross patde sable, and this is the bearing on a seal of Robert Strang 1579. Sir David Lindsay's coat is for Pitcorthy, and has three mascles ; between mascles and lozenges there is constant confusion in the MSS.,
Strang of yt
Ilk.
L.
;
would seem that the cross patde was borne by the Balcaskie family, and not by the Strangs of Pitcorthy. The only early entry in the Lyon Register is, c. 1680, David Strang, merchant in London, descended of Balcaskie argent, a chevron wavy but
it
—
sable, ensigned with a cross patde azure between three lozenges of the " Duke quod a cluster of vine grapes proper ; motto second crest ;
—
—
utile."
The
next is, 1791, Sir Robert Strange, the eminent engraver, representative of Balcaskie, descended from a family seated in South Ronaldsame shay, Orkney argent, a chevron between three lozenges sable crest and motto. In 1798 his eldest son James, banker in London, recorded the same coat, with crest, a castle proper masoned sable motto above '' Fortes fortuna juvat T and it "Stet fortuna domus;'' below the shield side an ancient Caledonian had a grant of supporters on the dexter
—
;
—
—
—
;
This gentleman 1840, leaving three coheiresses, who married James Wolfe Murray of Cringletie, a Senator of the College of Justice William Pitt Dundas, C.B., Deputy-Clerk Register and Archibald Trotter of Dreg-
warrior, died in
and on the
sinister
an ancient Danish warrior.
;
;
horn.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
191
His younger brother, Sir Thomas Andrew Strange, Chief-Justice of Madras, was father of the present Lumisden Strange, Madras Civil Service,
who
represents this family.
granted to William Strang the right to pasture sixty oxen and cows, three hundred sheep, and four horses, belonging to his lands of Kynaldy and Petardy on the moor of Crail, and to cut there forty cartloads of turf and ten cart-loads of broom. Richard de Anstruther granted a charter of lands in Anstruther to John Strang and Cecilia, his spouse, sister of the granter, which was confirmed by David II. 1362.
Robert
II,
William Strang possessed Balcaskie 1438 John of Balcaskie was killed at Pinkie 1547 the estate was sold, c. 1615, by John elder, and his son John younger, John, son of the latter, was a Lieutenant in Colonel Cochrane's regiment in Germany, and father of Thomas, repre;
;
;
senter of the family in 1642. The coheiresses of the line seated at Pitcorthy for several generations, married Andrew Clephane, David Grundistoun, and Melville of
Carnbee.
Provost of Forfar, sat in parliament for the burgh His sons, William and Robert, merchants in Stockholm, were 1645-48. benefactors to their native town. Cadets of the family went to France 1552, to Lewes 1605, to Ireland about the same time, where a funeral entry, 1619, makes the chevron wavy, the lozenges and cross patde azure to Shetland, where James of Urisgirthe left coheiresses in 1642, one of whom married Mr Thomas Alexander,
;
Henry.
Younger sons were much connected with Pittenweem.
Peter had a
Nicholas represented the burgh parliament 1593. seems to have been one of this branch that went to Orkney, as in 1670 William was served heir of his father, Andrew Strang, in South Ronaldshay, in a tenement in Pittenweem. In Lanarkshire there were several families of the name. Dr John was principal of the University of Glasgow 1626, and left a daughter and he^r, who married William Ferguson of Caitloch. Burnhouse was for five generations the property of a family of Strang, now Strange, and was sold by Alexander, an officer in the Thirteenth Light Dragoons at Waterloo. His son Thomas, Captain R.N., salt-house
there
in
;
It
left issue.
baronet, descended from an emigrant from Scotland, carries the chevron wavy sable between three lozenges azure, and in middle chief an estoile gules the crest and motto of Balcaskie, along with another crest and motto.
Stronge, of
Tynan Abbey,
co.
Armagh,
"
;
*WiNDEGAiTis OF YT Ilk. Windygates is in Nairne of yt Ilk. L. John de Name in ;
Fifeshire.
and Laurence de 141 7 Laurence Narn, bailie of 141 4,
Nairn 14 16, seal with a chaplet, while in St Andrews, uses three cinquefoils. The arms registered 1672-78 for Alexander Nairne of Sandfoord are
—
-
1
WORKMAN'S
92
MS.
parted per pale argent and sable, on a chaplet four mullets all counterchanged. Sir Robert, afterwards Lord Nairne, registered at the same time the coat given in L. and W,, with the tinctures reversed. The estate of Sandfoord and the representation of the family were at this time separated, as Thomas, afterwards of Baldovan, son of William,-
—
grandson and only representative of David of Sandfoord, records parted per pale sable and argent, on a chaplet four cinquefoils counterchanged. This would appear then to have been considered the chief coat, but it is rendered doubtful by the matriculation of the coat with the four mullets with differences by five cadets, while John Nairne of Seggieden, descended of the house of Sandfoord, has assigned to him parted per pale sable and argent, on a chaplet four quatrefoils all counterchanged, a martlet for
—
difference.
In 1870 the late John Berry of Tay field, co. Fife, advocate, who possessed part of the old family estate of Sandfoord, was allowed to quarter the coat recorded by Alexander Nairne of Sandfoord, who was son of Sir Thomas of Sandfoord, fourth son of Alexander of Sandfoord, whose lands of Innerdovat were erected into a barony by charter 1627.
Alexander, 1672-78, died about 1705, when the estate was sold; he left two daughters, the elder of whom Mr Berry represented, the younger married Colin Campbell of Smiddiegreen. Alexander had a younger brother,
Mr
David, resident in France in 1687, when he had a birth-
brief.
Sir Thomas, who was a lieut.-colonel of horse, and was fined ;^i8oo after the Restoration, acquired the most of the estate from his elder brother William, father of Thomas, who was of Baldovan, co. Forfar; William of Baldovan, son of Thomas, died 1716, leaving a son, Thomas of Baldovan.
Mr Samuel
Nairne, immediate elder brother of Sir Thomas, married Margaret, daughter of Andrew Bruce of Earlshall, and their granddaughter, Margaret Nairne, wife of John Cunningham of Fittarthie, became heir of that branch of the Bruces. Among the cadets were Nairne of Langsyd, Nairne of Craigtoun, of
whom
Thomas, who died in 1708, leaving an heiress, Ann, Mrs Duncan Nairne of Seggieden, whose heiress married Patrick Hay, and was ancestress of the present owner. The surname is no doubt taken from the burgh of Nairn; in 1361 Adam de Narryn was chaplain of the the last was ;
altar of the Blessed
charters of the
Virgin at Inverness
Duke
;
Michael de Nairne witnesses
of
Albany 1406-11, being designed successively and scutifer noster ; 1448, David is a witness at Stirarmiger, scutifer, in parliament for that burgh Duncan, bailie of ling, and 1458 Robert sat ;
of the Stirling 1649, sat in parliament after the Restoration, was provost burgh and d.s.p., his nephew and heir in 1673 being Sir John Paul,
H. M.
resident at Copenhagen. Alexander Name or Nairne
was of Sandfoord
1445, sat in parliament 1449, held the offices of Comptroller, Keeper of the Rolls, Lyon King of
WORKMAN'S
MS.
193
Arms, and married one of the four coheiresses of Walter de Fenton of Beaufort and Baky. Their son, David of Sandfoord, in 1490, was one of the heirs of his aunt, Janet Fenton, widow of William Hacket. Alexander of Sandfoord was Sheriff of Fife 1535. Adam Nairne was sub-chanter of Elgin 1450 Nairnes of Cromdell, ;
in Inverness-shire, figure 1567-1660; in 1649 Thomas sat in parliament for Forres, and in 1662 Patrick of Alchrosse, in Morayshire, was fined
;^I200.
Lord Nairne's ancestors were seated at Muckersie, co. Perth, of which Mr John had a charter 151 1. The Dowager-Marchioness of Lansdowne inherits the barony of Nairne as heir of Margaret, only child of His brother, Mr Robert, first lord, a senator of the College of Justice. Alexander of Greenyards, co. Stirling, left descendants, of whom John sold Greenyards, and died in 1752 and another succeeded to Drumkilbo on the death of Agnes Nairne, wife of William Blair of Torsappie. She had acquired that estate, which was not long ago sold by the descendant of her heir. Sir David was Secretary of the Order of the Thistle 1704, Under Secretary of State at the time of the Union, and died in 1734. A baronetcy was conferred in 1704 on Thomas Nairne of Dunsinnane, co. Perth, which became dormant in 181 1, on the death of Sir ;
baronet, a senator of the College of Justice the estate is in the possession of the heir of entail, paternally Mellis, who takes the surname of Nairne.
William,
fifth
;
Simon
Nairne, portioner numerous descendants. 82.
Balfour of Burle.
of L.
;
Newton-Rires,
co.
Fife,
there are added in ink
—
1526,
left
—
supporters the half-length :
an otter and a swan both issuing from water; crest figure of a female issuing from a tower with her arms extended, holding motto " Nichal teinere." in each hand the head of some animal L. 83. Blair of Angus. Allardice of yt Ilk. L. Gressone of Lage. Of old, is added. L. Fairlie of yat Ilk. L.
—
;
Lecke of yat
Ilk, or Lecre.
L.
;
the charges are rather cinquefoils
than roses.
Malcolm dominus de Leky was father of Murdoch, who had various charters 1390 and later; James of that Ilk 1493; John of that Ilk fell at Pinkie, leaving a son, Walter of that Ilk 1555-77 Alexander of that Ilk died in 1605, leaving a son of his own name, father of John Leckie of that Ilk 1646-63, who seems to have been the last baron of Leckie; the ;
lands were a barony before the middle of the sixteenth century. There were Leckies of Kipdarroch, of whom Robert, in 1605, was Leckies of Deshers, for tutor of the young laird of Leckie as next of kin of whom the last, Walter, of four descents, c, 1620 to 1704 Leckies Mye, ;
;
died 1736, leaving three grand-daughters his coheirs; Leckies of Greenside of Croy Leckie, of whom John left his property to his grandin
;
3c
WORKMAN'S
194
MS.
James Buchanan, merchant in Glasgow 1731 Margaret, daughter and heir of Archibald Napier of Ardmore, married a gentleman of the name, and her son, Archibald, inherited Ardmore William, merchant in Glasgow, was father of Mr Thomas, minister of Kilmaronock 1703-23, whose son, William of Broich, married Janet, daughter of John Buchanan, W.S., and died in 1799; John of Broich died 1814. *Annand of yat Ilk. In 181 2 Alexander, merchant in London, as son,
;
;
representative of the ancient family of Auchterellon, in Aberdeenshire, registered argent, a saltire gules cantonned with two mascles in chief and base azure and two ermine spots in flank, a chief of the second
—
crest
—a
griffin
segreant proper;
griffins proper. early seal of
An
motto
— "Sperabo;"
;
supporters— two
William de Anant is a boar's head seal of David, son of Sir David Anand a saltire and chief with a label of three points seal of John 1421 the saltire and chief; an entirely different coat is used by John 1526 on a fess three mullets, and in base a garb. Pont gives the coat as in W., with crest, a bull's head sable, and the " motto, Sperabo." There are variations as to the tincture and number of the minor charges, the mascles being sometimes gules, and sometimes the field ermine and the mascles or. This surname would seem to be taken from Annan or Annandale, and the saltire and chief are the arms of the Lords of that valley, but it is not in that quarter that we meet with the name. Adam de Anand, rector of Monimail, and canon of Dunkeld, 1254-66. William de Anaund, of the county of Forfar, swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296. John de Anand was vicar of Aboyne 1300, and had been chaplain to Alexander III. 1335, Walter, rector of Dornock. Henry was Sheriff of Clackmannan 1328-42, and had charters of Sauchie, Balquharn, and Auchendrane from Robert I. David was taken prisoner at Neville's Cross Sir David had many gifts and charters from David II., sat in council 1357 and 1364, and did homage to Robert II. in 1371. He or another of the same name, in 1375 resigned the lands of Fothnevyn and the office of forester of the Royal Forest of Plater. Sir David, Lord of Myles 1380, had a son Alexander, and a daughter
—
—
—
;
;
;
;
whom he gave lands in the barony of Onele in free marriage, her husband being Alexander Strachan of Carmyle. In the fortieth year of his David II. granted a life annuity from reign the fermes of Aberdeen, to his " cousin," Robert de Anand. Christina, to
Auchter Ellon was the property of John de Annand, designed dominus 1424; David of Auchter Ellon 1457-27; Henry, 1491, married Marjory Cullen, and died 1505; Alexander, 1505-27; Thomas, 1537-48; Alexander, 1574- 1602, married Margaret, daughter of Alexander Eraser of Philorth; Alexander, his son, sold the estate before 1619, married Margaret, daughter of Cheyne of Essilmont, and was grandfather of Robert, who in 1659 is designed sometime in Artrochie; this is perhaps the Robert,
whose
son, Alexander,
Alexander of Haddo,
who
d.s.p.
—
merchant in Aberdeen, left issue 1792; William of Haddo, merchant
WORKMAN'S in
London,
1802
d.s.p.
;
MS.
195
and John, father of Alexander of Sutton,
co.
Surrey, who in 181 2 was recognised as head of the family he left issue. Henry of Orchard ton 1603, was a brother of the last laird there were Annands of Collihill, of Murrestoun, of Kincary, and of Melgund. The last, a considerable family, intermarried with Lord Gray, Cossins of that Ilk, &c., and ended in Janet, who in 1542, with consent of her ;
;
husband, Balfour of Baledmonth, sold the estate. The burgh of Elgin was represented in parliament by John Annand 1579-84, and by Alexander 1593. William, dean of Edinburgh 1675-89, is said to have been of the Auchter Ellon family. Pont and Porteus give the saltire 84. Andersoun of yat Ilk. sable with four mullets gules. Sir J. Balfour's blazon is argent, a saltire engrailed, a crescent with a mullet in each corner. The saltire or St Andrew's cross, evidently allusive to the name, is the principal charge in eighteen out of the twenty-one entries for the name in the Lyon Register. Of the remaining three one indicates Spanish descent, another personal distinction, the third is the coat of
—
Anderson of Westerton, co. Banff, latterly of Newbigging, Kingask, and Montrave, in Fife, and is as old as the sixteenth century. It is argent, a chevron gules between three stars in chief and a crescent in base
—
azure.
The
Captain Alexander John Anderson was his son, Charles Henry, died unkilled at Lucknow, in March 1857 married 1876, but there are other descendants. The following arms, granted in 1669 to William, sometime Provost of Glasgow, and its representative in parliament 1665-73, were not registered argent, a saltire engrailed between two mullets in chief and an elephant's head crest base, and as many escallops in flank gules estates
were sold
after
;
—
— couped argent. Anderson of Chapletown (Funeral Escutcheon) —argent, a ;
saltire sable
between four mullets gules. In 1479 Thomas Anderson was elected for the burghs on the committee of causes, and in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries several burghs were represented in parliament by persons of the name ; John was doomster 1524-40. 1424, John de Andirston, prior of Fyvie. 1479, John of Balmaddy 1577, Herbert of 1490, John of Pitfour; 1576, John of Struthers Terraughty are among the earliest landowners of the name. The Andersons of Dowhill can be traced to 1540 two of them, named John, were provosts of Glasgow, and the younger also represented the The Andercoheiresses married Leckie and Moore. city in parliament sons of Stobcross 1611-1755; Andersons of Linkwood, near Elgin; Andersons of Finzeauch, coheiresses married Gregory and Wilson ;
—
;
;
;
;
Andersons of Bourtie 1663- 1825, Mary, only sister of Alexander, last of Bourtie, married William Young of Sheddocksley, provost of Aberdeen, and left five coheiresses, who sold the estate Anderson of Windygoul ;
WORKMAN'S
196
MS.
Anderson of Balram Anderson of Burnemouth and Winterfield Anderson of Tushielaw Anderson of Tillilum are among the principal ;
;
;
—
;
families of the name.
Anderson of Mill Hill, co. Middlesex, and of Fermoy, co. Cork, were both of Scotch descent. Colonel Anderson, a Scot in the Swedish service, maternally descended from Sinclair of Murtle, was ennobled there in 1668. Candacraig in Strathdon was sold in 1865, after having been, it is said, for ten generations, the seat of a family of Anderson. There never were Andersons of that Ilk, and certainly the surname does not imply descent from a common ancestor. Douglas of Quhitinghame. L. an addition in ink. GouRLAWBANKS (?). Argent, a tree issuing from a mount in base vert, on the upper part of the foliage a besant (?) charged with a mullet gules in the background low hills of a blue colour. L. 85. COCKBURN OF NeWHALL. COCKBURN OF OrMISTOUN. L. CocKBURN OF Henderland. L. argent, a crescent sable between extinct baronets,
;
;
;
three cocks' gules.
CoCKBURN OF SkIRLING. FouLis OF CoLiNTOUN. and resemble edock leaves
;
L.
both here and in L. the leaves are broad a note in W. says, edock or bay leaves. In L.
;
the chartulary of Cambuskenneth are illuminated the arms of Mr James " Foulis, Clerk Register 1535, with the motto, Ne quid nimis;" the leaves are shorter and rounder, not in the least like bay or laurel leaves. Balfour says laurel leaves vert, and Porteus laurel leaves proper. Pont, on the other hand, gives edock leaves vert crest— a crescent ; and the above ;
probably the original bearing of the family ; the Lord Clerk Register, who acquired Colinton and founded the existing family, was son of James Foulis, skinner, burgess of Edinburgh, and may have
This
motto.
is
taken the \t2i\ts,feuilles, as allusive to his name. There are seals, 1429, of William Foulis, a wheat sheaf, and Philip Foulis a mullet pierced but neither is on a shield in 1450 Henry Foulis, a priest, uses a chevron between two mascles and a mullet. ;
—
The
coat confirmed, 167 1, to Sir John of Ravelston, baronet, is argent, on a fess between three bay leaves vert a primrose or ; the primlittle later rose indicates his connection with the family of Primrose.
Mr
Alexander Foulis of Ratho recorded
three laurel leaves vert as in
A
a chevron between
the plates allusive to the office plates the first of this branch. John, merchant
many
of General of the Mint, held by
—argent, on
;
Edinburgh, 1672-78, has a holly branch between three bay leaves
slipped vert. It
was not
—argent, three
till
1790 that the coat of the Colinton family was recorded
laurel leaves slipped vert.
In 1818 the Ratho coat was recorded as a quartering by the heir general of the family, Archibald, afterwards Sir Archibald Christie of Riddry. The Hopes of Hopetoun added a bay leaf slipped vert on the
WORKMAN'S
MS,
197
chevron in their paternal shield, to indicate descent from the heiress of a younger branch of Colinton, which was seated at Leadhills, co. Lanark, and bore a bordure gules for difference. Ravelstoun, before the intermarriage with Primrose, bore a bordure indented vert, and Woodhall, whose representative succeeded to the Colinton baronetcy, had a bordure ermine.
The surname
doubtless taken from a locality, and may have arisen in the neighbourhood of any or each of the half dozen places in Scotland called Foulis or Fowlis. is
Thor de Foules witnessed a
Maule of Foulis
charter of William
ante 1260.
Mr William Foulis, a churchman, c. 1290; Mr William, Archdeacon of St Andrews, was Keeper of the Privy Seal, c. 1430 Patrick, bailie of Edinburgh 1432 Alexander, a lord auditor 1471-89, and sat in parlia;
;
ment
Henry was depute-marischal
for Linlithgow.
1545-48, died 1772.
The
last
of the Ratho family was Alexander, advocate, who Sir Archibald Foulis-Primrose of Dunipace, baronet, sold Ravelston 1726, was executed for treason at Carlisle 1746 left a son Archibald, who died in 1747, and several daughters, of whom Elphinstone married ;
James Rollo of Powhouse, and another was wife of Robert Peek, silkmercer in London. The surviving children had a pension from the Crown of ;^200 per annum, and the estate of Dunipace was claimed unsuccessfully by John, brother and heir male of Sir Archibald 1751. Two of the descendants of James, first of Colinton, Lord Clerk Register 1531-48, were Senators of the College of Justice Sir James of Colinton 1661, Lord Justice-Clerk 1684, and his son Sir James of Reidfurd 1674. Colinton was sold by Sir James, the last baronet of the elder line. TuLLAS. L. ; or, on a fess between three cross crosslets fitchde gules as many mullets argent this was recorded, c. 1750, by Alexander Tulloch of Tanachie, heir male of William, Bishop of Moray, 1481 crest ^a mitre ;
;
motto
—
;
—
' '
' '
Pietate parentum. The Bishop's seal, 1480, has the same bearings that of Thomas, Bishop of Orkney 1422, has no shield, but the cross crosslet appears 'on it, perhaps as a device, and the complete coat is cut on his monument at
proper
;
;
Kirkwall, but without date he probably died in 1460. In 1 54 1 Arthur Tulloch uses a boar's head erased, and in chief two ;
mullets.
In 1360 Alexander de Tullech was connected with Forfarshire. Walter had a charter of Bonnington from Robert II. Dorothea, heiress of Bonnington in 1491 was wife of Walter Wood, and on the monument of their son, William Wood of Bonnington, the cross crosslets of Tulloch are added to the coat of his paternal family. In 1399 Robert III. granted to John, son of William Toullocht, the keepership of Montrewmonth Moor, and this remained with his descendants, the
TuUochs of
Hillcairnie, for nearly
3D
two centuries.
WORKMAN'S
198
MS.
Tannochy was the property of Robert Tulloch Alexander,
who
Ker
86.
sold
(?).
Mackenzie.
1578,
and descended to
in 1772.
it
Azure, on a chevron argent three mullets gules. Gules, a stag's head cabossed or, between the attires a
mullet.
Hamilton of Fingaltoun and Hamilton of Prestoun. The former as L. the latter gules, three cinquefoils argent within a bordure compony sable and of the second. The coat recorded, 1672, by " the eldest cadet of the faniilie of Hamiltone," is Sir Thomas of Preston, ;
—gules, three cinquefoils within a bordure argent no supporters. David of Fingalton sat in parliament 1560. These lands had been ;
the property of his ancestors early in the fourteenth century. Preston, in East-Lothian, a later acquisition, was erected into a burgh of barony 1552. Arms registered, 1672-78, by James of Drylaw or, a 87. *LocH.
—
between two swans naiant
saltire engrailed sable
in fess
undde or
in
a
loch proper.
Drylaw, co. Edinburgh, was acquired in 1641 by his father, James, merchant in Edinburgh, and sold in 1786 by their descendant, George Loch of Drylaw. argent, on a chief vert three crescents of the field. The coat with the chief azure, as in L., occurs in 1508. a fess between three crescents. Seal of George, 1561
Symsoun.
L.
;
—
George Simpson of Udoch, coat as in
co.
Aberdeen, 1672-78, was allowed the
W.
William represented Pittenweem in parliament. *LowRiE. Pont and Porteus give sable, an orle or garland, on the top thereof a drinking bowl, bottle, or cup argent. The arms of Laurie of Maxwellton are not registered, but in 1722 Mr Walter of Redcastle, minister of Stranraer, entered sable, a cup argent with a garland between two laurel branches issuing out of the same vert, a bordure argent charged with eight boars' heads erased 1593,
—
—
gules
;
the bordure
is
probably indicative of his marriage to Margaret
Gordon. Redcastle, which
was acquired by Stephen,
first
of Maxwellton, has
passed through female descent to the present owner. In 1857 the arms were registered, quartered with his paternal coat, by Rowland Craig-Laurie, then of Redcastle. The oldest matriculation for the name is 1674, Francis Lowrie of Plainstones, bailie of Portsburgh— parted per fess gules and sable, a cup, &c., as in 1722.
Mr
William was Archdean of Brechin 1488; there were landowners Hector belonged to the King's Houseof the name in Coldingham 1490 hold 1494; Matthew of Cairnhill 1577; a burgess family in Edinburgh, to which Francis above-named belonged, was from Dumfriesshire; David was, in i^d^^^ judicator parliamenti ; William married, about 1650, Marion Weir, heiress of Blackwood, and was ancestor of the Weirs of ;
that place, baronets.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
199
Stephen Lawrie, merchant burgess of Dumfries, and a bailie of the burgh, acquired Redcastle and] Maxwellton, married about 1605 Marion Corsan, daughter of John, Provost of Dumfries, and died in 1638 the Funeral Escutcheon, conform to Lyon's Warrant 26th April 1698, of Sir Robert Laurie, shows that Stephen's mother's name was Ferguson. Sir Robert was created a baronet 1685 on the death, in 1848, of Sir Robert Laurie, the title became dormant or extinct, and his nephew, John Minet Fector, succeeded to Maxwellton, and assumed the surname of Laurie. *AcHESOUN. There is added, " Knight barronet 1631." The seal of Mark, portioner of Ballencrieff 1606, is an eagle displayed." Sir J. Balfour gives for Achesone argent, an eagle displayed sable between a crescent and a mullet in chief gules the coat of the Gosford family is given by him and Pont, and has a chief vert charged with two ;
;
—
;
mullets or spur rowels or. Sir Archibald of Glencairny, in Ulster, Secretary of State in Scotland, the same within a bordure azure charged with three cinquefoils and as many mullets argent or or; crest a cock standing on a trumpet;
motto
—
—
"
Vigilantibusr
The Earls
of Gosford have ceased to carry the
bordure.
This family belonged to Edinburgh, and were long connected with the Mint. 1483, Henry in Edinburgh; 1526, James, goldsmith, master coiner and burgess of the Canongate 1536, William, chaplain of St Giles'. John, burgess of Edinburgh, and one of the collectors of taxes, married Janet Fisher, was killed at Pinkie 1547, and left a son and heir, John; 1553, James, master coiner; 1565, John, master coiner; 1585, John, master of the Mint, was ruined by making advances for the Earl of Gowrie, and died soon after, leaving a son and heir, John, designed portioner of Inveresk; Thomas, master of the Mint 1587 John, general of the Mint 1632; 1592, Mark, of Acheson's Haven. ;
;
by John 1584, and Mr John 1612-17; Mr John, advocate, was portioner of Newtonlees, and died in 1662 he was son of Thomas, burgess of Edinburgh, and Margaret
Dunbar was represented
in parliament
;
Eraser, his wife.
Gosford, in East-Lothian, was the property of Alexander in 1577, and was sold in 1629, by Alexander, who married Elizabeth Douglas of the
Bonjedward
family,
and
left
three sons.
In 1577 an act was passed to enable Captains Henry and Patrick to levy troops for service in the low countries; Patrick died in 1584, leaving two sons, Henry and Archibald, the latter a minor, to whom Alexander of Gosford was served tutor as next of kin. These brothers both acquired property in Ulster, and Henry d.s.p. Sir Archibald was a Senator of the
College of Justice, Secretary of State, and was created a baronet of Nova Scotia, which title has descended to the present Earl of Gosford. When Sir Archibald was created a peer in 1776, he took his title, from the estate in Scotland, which had formerly belonged to the family. John, bailie of Edinburgh 1576, was father of John, M.D., who acquired Sydserf, in Haddingtonshire, and d.s.p. his brother and heir, ;
WORKMAN'S
200
MS,
Robert of Sydserf, merchant burgess of Edinburgh, left, with other issue, Robert of Sydserf, who registered arms 1672-78 as Gosford, with a bordure invecked sable for difference. Rochsolloch, CO. Lanark, belonged for several generations to Aitchisons, of whom John, then proprietor, recorded arms 1771, with a crescent between the two spur rowels on the chief. *FiN OF YT Ilk. This coat was registered by James Phine of Whytehill, 1672-78; William Finnie of Hillbrae, co. Aberdeen, in 1765 had a grant of gules, a crane without a head argent, and in 1692 a grant to Robert Fennison, merchant in Edinburgh, is founded on the same the blazon is ^gules, a fess between three besants in chief and a crane in
—
—
;
base.
Soon
after the
Reformation several persons of the name of Fin or
Phin became possessed of parts of the lands of the Abbey of Dunfermline Mr John of Whitehill, co. Fife, 1634 Mr George, last of Whitehill, minister of St Laurence, died in 1689, leaving a daughter and heir, ;
;
Henrietta.
In 1296 William Fin of Lanarkshire swore fealty to Edward I. or Fynweck. This is given by Pont for Finnie, with the " motto, igne resurgit virtus ^ Reginald de Fynwyk was bailie of Ayr 1387. Fenwick or Finnick is the name of a parish in Ayrshire.
Fynwyk Ex
A phoenix is
the crest of the Northumbrian family of Fenwick. Sir James Balfour gives argent, a chevron gules 88. *Trotter. charged with a mullet of the first, in base a boar's head of the second.
—
sometimes between three boars' heads. " Master George Trotter of Charterhall Stacie supplies the arms of " a chevron in the Merse gules between three boars' heads sable, ^argent, armed and langued of the second, the chevron charged with a mullet of motto " Deo dante floreo." the field for difference crest a star gules " There is added, in a different hand, he dyed without heires 167 1." He gives also Trotter of old argent, a horse trotting sable bridled and saddled gules, and in chief three stars of the third. In 1676 Henry Trotter of Mortonhall, co. Edinburgh, had a a few years certificate of arms, but it was not entered in the register " heretor also of the baronie of Charterhall, later, when he is described as whereof Foggohill, Foggomill, and Chatterraw are parts and pendicles," he registered quarterly, first and fourth, argent, a fess gules between three mullets in chief sable, and a crescent in base azure, as his own second and third, argent, a paternal coat for Trotter of Mortonhall chevron gules between three boars' heads couped sable, for Trotter of Porteus says the chevron
is
—
— —
;
;
—
;
—
;
Charterhall {see F. E.)
—
'^
;
crest
—a groom holding a horse proper furnished
In 1792 his descendant, John of In promptur gules; motto " Mortonhall, had a grant of supporters as representative of the families of Catchelraw and Charterhall, and chief of the sirname of Trotter in " Scotland z. lion gules armed and langued azure, and a horse argent
—
WORKMAN'S maned and hoofed
or.
The
crest
was
MS.
201
altered to a knight in
armour
proper holding his courser argent caparisoned gules. In Douglas's Baronage there is a genealogy of this family
which
contains
many errors. Thomas Trotter is
stated to have married in 1490. His son and heir Robert, born twenty-eight years after, is made father of Thomas, who had a Crown charter in 1553, at which date he could hardly be more
than twelve years of age. William, brother of this Thomas, is identified with a William Trotter, treasurer of the city of Edinburgh 1640-41. John, the purchaser of Mortonhall, born in 1553, is placed in the pedigree as nephew of the treasurer, that is to say, the nephew was born ninety years before the period when the uncle was in office. Sir Robert Douglas calls John, founder of Mortonhall, son of Thomas of Catchelraw, but the Funeral Escutcheons make his father's
name John, and call his mother Ferguson. The Lyon Register, about 1672, gives the arms of William Trotter, representer of Catchelraw, who does not appear in the Mortonhall gene-
—
alogy at all ; the coat is that quartered by Mortonhall, and the crest a horse passant argent furnished gules. At the same time are entered the arms of a cadet of Catchelraw, David, Captain of one of His Majesty's frigates.
Robert Trotar appears in Winton Domesday, 1148, as holding land at Winchester. In the north of England, particularly in the county of the name is common. Durham, Johan Trot, burgess of Montrose, signed the
Ragman
Roll 1296.
In 1413 William Trottar, capellanus, witnesses a charter. 1479, John, Alexander, and Adam Trotter are summoned, along with Patrick Home of Polwarth, as rebels. 1494, George held lands in Dunse. 1512, charter of Waringzesland, in Coldingham, to John, son and heir of the late Ninian Trotter and Alison Lumsden, on the resignation of John Lumsden. 1523, Sir William Bulmer writes to the Earl of Surrey, that Sandy Trotter and another Trotter, who are coming to him, are spies of In 1570 William Trotter was Captain of the Duke, and not to be trusted. Home Castle, and had to surrender to the English. Prentonan, in the parish of Eccles, was the seat of the principal family of the name from the middle of the sixteenth century till nearly the end of the seventeenth. Nisbet gives their arms argent, a crescent gules, on a chief azure three stars of the first. About the time when the Prentonan family a Alexander failed, Trotter, was, 167 1, proprietor of Kettleshiel in cadet, the same part of the Merse the arms of this line are recorded with the chief indented for difference, and the same crest and motto a horse " Festina lente." trotting proper, From Kettleshiel descended the Trotters of Horton, Shudy Camps, Dyrham, The Bush and Castlelaw, Dreghorn, and Sir Coutts Trotter, baronet, to whom supporters were granted ^a white horse proper and a lion argent, which are borne by his heir, Sir Coutts Lindsay, baronet. The family formed a small clan in Berwickshire, their various pro-
—
—
;
—
WORKMAN'S
202
MS.
In January 1573-74, Cuthbert in another. perties all lying near one Fogo, Thomas in the Hill, Thomas in Netherhall, William in Foulschedlaw, Thomas of Prentonen, and Charles in Catchelraw, subscribed a bond, as principals and representatives of the whole surname of Trotter, obliging themselves and all of their name, under penalty of ;^5ooo, to behave as dutiful subjects to the king and obey the warden.
—
Turner. An addition in ink a baton (?) in pale between a sword in pale point downwards on the dexter, and a dexter hand couped at the wrist on the sinister side, on a chief a mullet on the dexter side, and a crescent on the
sinister.
—
*Craig. L. Cragye seal of Margaret Cragy of that Ilk 1377 ermine, on a fess three crescents seal of Mr John 1584 has a fleur-delis between two crescents on the fess. 89.
;
;
At
Tarves,
in Aberdeenshire, are
monuments of Thomas
Craig, died 1584, and Marjory Riddell, his wife and of William Craig, Rothesay Herald, and Marjory Reith, his spouse, built by themselves 161 7 the Craig arms are as in W. The herald d.s.p. his nephew,
pursuivant, who
;
;
;
Mr Alexander Randell, being his heir 1632. Arms of W. Craige, on a panel at Kirkwall
1620— impaling a lion with three mullets (?) the a chief charged The coat is rudely cut, the fess between initials of the wife are M. H. very broad, the boar's head large, and the crescents very small there are only six ermine spots, three in chief and three in base, disposed in fess. Another carving there, 1694, of D. Craige has no fess at all, but the head and crescents are in fess, and there is a fourth ermine spot in middle base; this impales Graham, J. G., a lion rampant between three roses, and in
rampant on a mount
in base,
;
;
chief three escallops. The coat registered
William Craigge of Gairsay, in boar's head couped gules armed or. Mid-Lothian, at the same time has
for
—1672-78 ermine, a
Orkney, was simplified to Ludovick Craig of Riccarton, in the original coat ermine on a fess sable three crescents argent— as quartered by the Stewarts of Craigie Hall and Newhalls, and given in L. Laurence Craigie of Kilgraston, co. Perth, 1672-78, recorded a coat greatly differenced from Craig parted per pale azure and sable, a chevron argent between three crescents or. Porteus gives Craig of Craigfintray, the original coat, otherwise ermine, on a fess sable two crescents and a boar's head or. The surname has been taken from some of the numerous places called
—
—
—
Craig or Craigie. In the Chartulary of Glasgow Robert de Crag and John del Crag witness charters in the reign of William the Lion 1232, Robert de Crag, canon of Glasgow; in 1296 fealty was sworn to Edward I. by Johan de ;
Cragyn of the county of Linlithgow, Johan Cragi of the same shire, Agneys del Crag and Johan de Crak of the county of Edinburgh, Johan de la Cragg of Lanarkshire, Thomas de Cregayn of the county of Ayr, Henry Crake of the county of Dumfries, and James de Crake of Selkirkshire.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
203
Alexander de Cragy was forfeited in 1334, and pardoned the following year.
homage to Robert II. married Margaret and had two (or three) sons, who d.s.p., and Montfode, Lady of Skirling, a daughter Margaret, heiress of Craigie, co. Linlithgow, who married, first, Sir John Stewart, second. Sir Herbert Maxwell in or before the tenth year of Robert II. she resigned her rights over the barony of Skirling and her mother's Lanarkshire lands to her half-brother, William de Cockburn. In Aberdeenshire we find Bryce de Craig, burgess of Aberdeen ante 1317 John de Crage in the reign of David II. and there were Craigs of John de
Craigie, 1371, did
;
;
;
;
Craigsfintry or Craigston who figured for several generations, 1 500-1620. In Dumfries and Kirkcudbright shires the name took the form of Craik, and a coat, also given from W., was borne entirely differing from that of Craig. In 1422 the
favour of James
Lawman
of Orkney and others grant an attestation in of Cragy, dominus de Hupe, husband of Margaret Sin-
daughter of Henry, Earl of Orkney, by Elizabeth, daughter of Several families in Malise, Earl of Orkney, Caithness, and Strathern. Orkney, probably descended from this marriage, were seated at Brugh, Banks, Skaill, Weaton, &c. John was lawman in 1497 George repre-
clair,
;
;
sented the county William of Gairsay (whose mother's name was Paplay) married a natural daughter of John Stewart, Earl of Carrick, and died in 1657, leaving, with a younger son, David of Over Sanday, who is probably the David who represented Kirkwall in parliament 1681-86, Hugh of in parliament 1652.
Gairsay, who married a Crichton of the Cluny family, was member for the shire 1661-61, and died in 1663. His eldest son Sir William also represented the county for many years till 1703 was steward of Orkney, and tacksman of the Crown rents, ;
customs, and excise registered arms married Anne, daughter of Sir Robert Hamilton of Silvertonhill died in Edinburgh 9th April 17 12, and was buried in the Greyfriars' Churchyard, sixteen quarters being displayed ;
;
;
at his funeral.
His son, David of Gairsay, was succeeded by William Honyman, who took the surname of Craigie he was son of James, younger son of Robert Honyman of Graemsay. Alexander Craigie, in Kilgrastoun, was dead in 1610, leaving issue among his descendants were Hugh of Dumbarnie, who sat in parliament Robert of Glendoick, Lord President of the Court of Session 1 698- 1 70 1 ;
;
;
1754-60; Robert, a senator of the College of Justice 1776; George Clerk Craigie of Dumbarnie, Lyon Depute 1823-45. In 1763 John Craigie of Hallhill in Fife, but also designed of Duniermine, on a fess gules three crescents barnie, registered a different coat or; his father had acquired Hallhill or Lawhill e. 1700, and it passed by
—
marriage into the family of Halkett. The Craigs of Dalnair, co. Dumbarton, intermarried with Colquhoun
WORKMAN'S
204
MS,
of Camstroddan, Govane of Drumquhassel, Chaplin of ColHston, &c., and expired in 1812, on the death of General Sir James Henry Craig, K.B., Governor of the Cape and of British North America ; his cousins and heirs were Tytler of Woodhouselee and Ker of Blackshiels. Arms erminois, on a fess per fess embattled gules and azure three crescents
—
argent.
Robert Craig, burgess of Edinburgh, said to be of the Craigfintry and family, married Katherine Bellenden, of the family of Auchinoule, had, with other issue, Mr Thomas, advocate, the great feudal lawyer, who to acquired Riccarton, and died in 1608; of his sons, Sir James went England in 1603, had grants of the reversion of the clerkship of the Wardrobe, and of the office of assistant-clerk in the King's Great Wardrobe, 161
1
of the
manor of Magheryentrim
manor of Castle Craig,
who
d.s.p.
;
in Ulster,
Robert, advocate,
and also of the
was
father of John, Heriot, heiress of
married Janet Sir her surname, and left descendants Ramornie, co. Fife, assumed Lewis was a senator of the College of Justice, as Lord Wrightslands, Robert of Riccarton, advocate, the last of the family, died in 1604-22.
advocate,
having,
in
1667,
;
1823, having settled his estate on James Gibson, writer to His Majesty's Signet, descended from the marriage in 1709 of Helen, only child of Thomas Craig of Riccarton, and Hon, William Carmichael of Skirling.
Mr
Gibson assumed the surname of Craig, and was allowed the arms as a quartering, with a grant of supporters the same year; he was afterwards created a baronet.
His cousin, Sir Thomas Gibson-Carmichael of Skirling, baronet, registered arms, at the same time quartering Craig of Riccarton as heir general of the family. It is curious that Skirling, which was brought by marriage with Margaret Montfode to the Craigies of that Ilk in the fourteenth century, should now be the property of the representative of Craig of Riccarton, whose residence is called Castle Craig. In the fifteenth century there were Craigs of East Craig or of that Ilk in East Lothian, of Craigsland or of that Ilk in Ayrshire, ently a fourth family of that Ilk in Angusshire. (?)
and appar-
*Waddell.
Pont makes the saltire checquy or and gules, and says the buckles are sometimes or. On this was founded the composed coat granted, in 1858, to Captain James Waddell, on his assumption of the additional surname of Boyd, at the desire of his cousin-german, Mrs Catherine Waddell Boyd of Nellfield, CO. Fife azure, a fess checquy argent and gules (Boyd) between two buckles of the second in chief, and a saltire couped in base checquy or and of the third. 1296, Laurence de Wedale, of the county of Roxburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. 1329, John de Wedal, bursar, connected with Melrose; 1343, John, a mctfik there; 1416, Nicholas of Edinburgh seals with his own seal an indenture with the Abbot of Melrose. Mr John,
—
;
parson of Flisk, was a senator of the College of Justice 1534. Burgess families of the name were long connected with Edinburgh and Jedburgh a family, for at least four generations, were portioners of in
;
Thorniedykes
WORKMAN'S
MS.
205
the barony of Crichton, viz.: Captain William, who was dead 1607; Archibald, who was dead 1647 Major Archibald, father of Archibald, writer in Edinburgh 1676. Dr Richard, Archdeacon of St Andrews, was deprived 1689. There were Waddells of Crawhill, Hillhead, Muirhouse, Balquhatston, In 1789 George of Balquhatston was heir of his uncle, Robert Colt &c. ;
of Garturk, co. Lanark, The heiress of Balquhatston, co, Stirling, married Alexander Peddie, Writer to the Signet, who has assumed her surname, and her cousin Christian Margaret, daughter and heir of William Waddell of Easter Moffat, CO. Lanark, married
Thomas Fenton-Livingstone
of Westquarter
and Bedlormie. This coat is given variously, sometimes with three boars' heads, sometimes three pheons' on the fess, instead of the arrows it does not appear at all in the Lyon Register till 1856. The name is met with chiefly in the shires of Lanark, Renfrew, and Ayr John represented Arbroath in the last parliament of Scotland. George and Thomas Hutcheson, brothers, founded the Hospital in Glasgow which bears their name 1639-41 they were sons of Thomas of Lambhill, co. Lanark, and both writers in Glasgow. Hutchison of Scotstoun, co. Renfrew, whose heiress married a younger son of Stewart of Blackhall, bore as in W., but with the fess azure and the boar's head erased. The name appears as Ostiane, Oustiane, Austiane, *OusTiN. Austin, and is probably son of Augustine. 1368, Andrew and Walter 1503-15, Dominus David Ostian, Augustine, burgesses of Edinburgh prebendary of Trinity College Church, Edinburgh; 1574-85, Thomas Austiane, vicar of Advie and Cromdale; 1586-96, Alexander Oustean
*HucHESOUN.
;
;
;
;
represented Edinburgh in parliament. Thomas Austin, who is said to have been a native of Kent, came to Scotland with Oliver Cromwell, settled in Perth, and became a prosperous trader there several of his descendants were magistrates of the burgh, ;
William being provost in 1722. Joseph acquired the estate of Kilspindie towards the close of the seventeenth century Captain Joseph of Kilspindie left with sons, who died unmarried, Cecilia, who married John Gloag of Greenhill, co. Perth, and was mother of William Gloag of Greenhill, whose eldest son, John Austin Lake-Gloag, Esq., in 1866 assumed the additional surname of Lake, on his marriage to Elizabeth Georgiana, daughter and coheir of Warwick, last Viscount Lake; on this occasion the following coat for Austin was confirmed to him as a quartering or, a chevron gules between three lions' gambs erect and erased azure armed of the second. Mr Lakeof brother is Ellis William co. Gloag's younger Gloag Perth, Kincairney, Sheriff of Stirling and Dumbarton shires. ;
—
Adam
Austin, M.D., uncle of Mrs Cecilia Gloag, married in 1754 Anne, daughter of Hugh Lord Sempill, and left issue. The Irish coat of Austin was entered in the Register as a quartering
3F
WORKMAN'S
2o6
by the Rev. William Austin-Gourlay of Kincraig.
in 1865,
the
MS.
MS.
The
coat in
not recorded. •Sanks of yt Ilk. is
In 1732 Alexander Schank of Castleriggs, co. fess argent between a cinquefoil in chief and Fife, ^gules, a falcon's leg jessed and belled in base of the second, a hawk's lure of the first. Critical notices of the published pedigrees of Shank of Castlerig, " are to be found in Jervise's Epitaphs and Inscriptions," and in the " Vol. I. Genealogist," The Castlerig family are descended from burgesses of Kinghorn, of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Henry represented the burgh in parliament 1643; they held part of the land adjacent to the castle, as tenants of the family of Lyon, Earls of Strathmore and Kinghorn, and afterwards acquired the property which remains in their possession. Ninian Shank was Provincial of the Dominicans in Scotland 1497. About the arms there is some confusion. Pont gives them for Sauchie they are carved in stone on a house at Kinghorn, with the date 1638, and
— registered
on a
;
;
The
pedigree calls the wife of Henry Shank, then living, Janet Cunningham, and Mr Jervise is of opinion, that the style of the work rather belongs to the time of Henry Shank and Agnes Balfour, the initials H.S., B. B.
say 1683.
*CowPER. Another coat is given for this name farther on. This was registered in 1737 for David Cowper of Balleny, writer Edinburgh, who 90.
Cheine
BuTLAR. covered cups
in;
d.s.p. before 1749. of Essilmont. L.
L.
;
azure, a
bar engrailed argent, or
or,
between three
or.
L. 91. Menteith OF Carss. Settoun of Tulibody. L. ^ DOWGLAS OF LaNGNUDRYE. L. DoWGLAS OF MoFFETH. L. Crechtoun of Brounstoune. L. the lion is sable. CoRSBE of yat Ilk. L. This coat was quartered by the Lords Carlyle, and in 1766 was registered for Andrew Crosbie of Holm,' advocate; he was son of Andrew of Holm, Provost of Dumfries, and (
;
grandson of John of Holm, merchant, also provost of that burgh 1708, and afterwards. In the shires of Ayr, Kirkcudbright, and Berwick are places called Crosbie or Corsbie, from which the surname may have been taken. 1296, Sir Reginald de Crosbie; 1298, John de Crosseby, clerk, was presented to the church of St Mary, in the Forest, and is named in the " Rotuli Scotie" 1319; 1358, protection from the King of England, in favour of John de Crosbie of the parish of Ligertwood; 1330, Stephen, son of Symon de Crosby of Ayrshire 1409, Crown charter of the barony of Bowne, co. Berwick, to Thomas, on the resignation of his father, ;
Thomas. John Corsbie, 92.
'Wakar.
Kirkcudbright in parliament. This very remarkable coat seems to have been dis-
in 1644, represented
WORKMAN'S
MS,
207
Pont blazons for the used, or at least to have been greatly modified. name or, three pallets gules surmounted of a saltire argent, on a chief
—
azure a crescent of the third between two spur rowels of the first. This is also given by Porteus. Another given by Pont, but seemingly added after his time, is argent, a saltire between a mullet and a martlet azure. See G. The Lyon Register contains nine entries of arms for the name of which six closely resemble the bearing given by Pont and Porteus another, a modern grant, has the saltire and chief without the pallets. About 1680 a coat allusive to the office of Keeper of His Majesty's Buckhounds, then held by him, was granted to Robert Walker argent, an oak-tree growing out of the base vert, betwixt a stag on the dexter and a buckhound on the sinister side, both in fall course gules crest a stag standing at gaze under a nut-tree proper motto "/« omnes casus" About the same time Mr William, minister of the English church in Barbadoes, was granted vert, on a canton argent an eye proper; crest a " Per varios casus''' rock in the sea the waves beating on it motto The surname is derived from the occupation of fuller or walker, but may also in some instances be indicative of pedestrian power. The Chartulary of Dunfermline affords an instance of the name and occupation going together as late as c. 1560 charter of feu-farm of the fuller's mill in Burnemouth in favour of Alexander Walker, About the same time John had sasine of a house and land in Dunfermline.
—
;
—
;
—
—
;
;
— —
—
;
Between 1644 and 1673 that burgh was several times represented in' parliament by William and Peter Walker. Persons of the name held land at Dron, in Fife, for several generaFrom the family of St Fort, in the same county, whose representions. tative registered arms in 1759, descends William Stuart Walker of Bow-' Edinburgh, C.B. 1341, Adam Walker, bailie of Inverness; 1365, English safe-conduct^ for Thomas Walkare, merchant of Scotland*TULLUS OF THAT Ilk. This name is added at the side in a differthe name originally above the shield, and much obliterated, ent hand seems to begin with A and end in one. A coat, closely resembling this, is given in K. for Pere, *HiSLOP. Archibald Hyslop, stationer, burgess of Edinburgh, recorded arms 1672-78, when the chief is made vert and charged with a book bound or between two stars argent. land, CO.
;
.
In the arms granted, 1813, to General Sir Thomas Hislop, baronet, G.C.B., the chief is omitted altogether, but is vert and charged with three mullets argent in the grant to a member of the family of Hyslop of Lotus or Lochend, co. Kirkcudbright, where they have been seated for two
hundred
years.
The surname
be met with in that quarter in the fifteenth cenWilliam Heslop was a canon of Holyrood at the Reformation. tury. See L. II. and F. E. for two other representations. 93. *Skeine. is to
WORKMAN'S
2o8
MS.
— —
as entered, 1672-78, by John Skene of that Ilk are ^gnles, three dirks paleways argent hefted and pommelled or, surmounted of as many wolves' heads couped of the third his supporters are on the
The arms
;
dexter a highlandman proper garb, holding a skene with his right hand in a guarding posture, and on the sinister another in a servile habit, a target on his left arm and the darlach at his side. in his
Skene, in Aberdeenshire, was erected into a barony by Crown charter 131 7, in favour of Robert de Skene, and remained with his descendants in the male line till the death of Alexander of that Ilk in 1827, when his nephew, James Earl Fife, succeeded it was sold in 1880. Sir John of Curriehill, co. Edinburgh, Lord Clerk Register and Senator of the College of Justice, author of the " Regiam Majestatem," was father of Sir James, baronet. Lord President of the Court of Session ;
1626-33.
His son, Sir John, d.s.p., and the present heir male of the William Forbes Skene, LL.D., author of " Celtic Scotland," and
family is other works.
The
coat of the Curriehill line, with the two skenes in sal tire, is not registered, but is cut on the monument, in the Greyfriars' Churchyard, Edinburgh, of Sir James, who died in 1633.
Gladure. and
The
sable, a dexter
coat given in K. for
Gulane— parted per
hand holding a flaming sword
fess argent erect, parted per fess
gules and of the first. Rate or Raet. Quarterly, sable and azure, a crescent argent. QuHiTE. Porteus blazons this with the martlet displayed between three quatrefoils, and reverses the tinctures. Stacie has the same, and has which is another entry, one of the icv^ authorities which show that visita" tions of arms really took place in Scotland, so I quote it in full Quhit or Whyt of Kirckaldie, the Whytes above writen, coUor altered done after Mr Skene his visitatione 1670, lyon-deput then." There are four matriculations for the name 1672-80 John of Ben:
—
—
;
;
nochy having exactly the coat given by Porteus. In two the bird is described as an eagle, and the other. Major Andrew Whyte, representer of Whyte of an Markle, has eagle volant.
The subsequent
grants all found on the old arms, but the coat of James of Stockbrigs, co. Lanark, 1754, is rather peculiar ^argent, a lymphad her oars in saltire sable, in the sinister chief point a martlet volant of the second with a small chain about its neck azure, to which is appended a plain cross gules.
—
In 1770 Janet White, wife of Cosimo Count Conti, registered her pedigree and arms, when the chief was altered to purpure and charged with three garbs or; she was only child of Robert White, Consul at Tripoli, and maternally her descent is stated from Mackenzie of Sandyland, Ross of Easter Fearn, and Gordon of Embo. On the father's side there seems little to be said ; he was a native of Fife, and vaguely said to be of the Bennochy family.
Robert
I.
granted to
Adam Quhyt
a charter of the lands of Stayhar,
WORKMAN'S
MS,
209
afterwards called Stairquhit or Barskimming, co. Ayr. There are English safe-conducts 1363-68 for John Whit, a Scottish merchant. Gilbert Qwhyt was bailie of Rutherglen 1375 George White of Bankhead, who matriculated arms in 1786, was provost of that burgh, and died soon after, leaving a son and heir, Walter. ;
In the reign of Robert
II.
Adam
Albus held lands
in Kincardine-
shire.
In 1479 William was forfeited for holding out the Castle of Dumbarton against the King. Henry Whyte, Dean of Brechin, sat in parliament 1535; Sir John was long deputy-director of Chancery about this time.
Between 1605 and 1641 James, Andrew, and John White were Robert sat in parliament for Kirkcaldy doomsters of parliament. Robert Whyte was the first provost of 1645-65, and John 1669-73. Kirkcaldy 1658, and died in August 1666; in the pedigree of Whyte of " Bennochy, in Douglas' Baronage," he seems to be identified with Robert of Powran, who died in 1667, aged sixty-eight, leaving a widow, Janet Tennant, so that the statement that he married, secondly, a daughter of Law of Dunikier, must be a mistake. In 1799 John White of Bennochy having inherited the property of his kinsman, General Robert Melville of Strathkinness, was allowed to quarter the arms of that family, and to carry as supporters two eagles with wings expanded sable, beaked, membered, collared, and chained or, the collars charged with three quatrefoils sable. There is a funeral escutcheon of Major Andrew above named, who
was Governor
of Edinburgh Castle, married Katherine Skene of the Halyards family, widow of Sir James Anstruther of Airdrie, and died in 1686, leaving issue; Markle is in Haddingtonshire, and his family intermarried with Hepburn of Alderston, Crichton of Hill, &c.
Martha Whyte, Countess of Elgin and Kincardine, governess
to the Princess Charlotte, descended from a family of merchants in Kirkcaldy ; her ladyship inherited the estate of Kingsmill, co. Fife, acquired by the marriage of John Whyte, bailie of Kirkcaldy, with Janet Boswell^ the heiress.
Alexander, Lord of Sterling, is added. Dr Rogers, in 1877, published two very interesting volumes on the family of Alexander and the first Earl of Stirling, showing the various claims that have been unsuccessfully made to the titles. The early
*Alschoner.
it is genealogy, however, seems not yet satisfactorily proved hardly Dr to have that the who is considered been born Earl, by Rogers possible ;
about 1567, was
y?/"/^ in
descent from
Thomas Alexander
_
1505-
In
mother
the funeral escutcheons of Lord Stirling's descendants his called Marjory or Margaret Campbell of the Glenorchy family,
all is
of Menstrie,
-
while Dr Rogers calls her Marion Coutts the Earl's father, Alexander Alschinder of Menstrie, made his will 5th February 1580, and appoints as ;
3G
2
1
WORKMAN'S
o
MS.
oversmen his "gude lord and maister, Colin, Earl of Argyl, &c., and i.e., grandfather, not father-in-law. of this Alexander shows that he had another wife, Marion, sister of William Graham of Gartavertan. In 1625 the Earl sealed with the coat here represented, but after his
Alain Cutis, his gudescyr,"
But the
will
world he laid claim to descent from the MacAlisters or MacAlexanders of Kintyre, and in 1631 Archibald of Tarbert, then the head of that family, resigned to him the chiefship, and a letter was written by rise in the
the
March 1632, directing Sir James Balfour, Lord Lyon, to him the Alexander coat, " quartered with the armes of clan who hath acknowledged him for chief of their familie." This
King
in
exemplify to Allaster,
was accordingly done, the blazon being—or, a lymphad her oars in saltire sable between three cross crosslets fitch^e gules and his lordship also bore in an escutcheon over all, the arms of Nova Scotia. " In Wood's " East Neuk of Fife there is a pedigree of the family of Alexander of Skeddoway and Drumeldrie, who are traced back to 1457, and it seems more probable that the Menstrie Alexanders were of this stock than that they came from Kintyre to Clackmannanshire. Robert sat in parliament for Stirling 1579-94, and the burgh of Easter-Anstruther was several times represented by persons of the name
—
1612-45. All the
;
arms recorded are variations of those
quarter Macalister. Several of the
MSS.
in
W., and none of them
give three crescents instead of one, two being
and all counterchanged. *Gledstainis of yt Ilk. The
in chief,
George Gladstanes, Archbishop of St Andrews 1606-15, is a saltire with a rose in chief; an early seal of Herbert de Gledstan is not heraldic, having a flower ornament seal of
;
John of Cocklaw, 1509, is a lion rampant. James Gladstains of that Ilk registered arms 1672-78 argent, a savage's head couped distilling drops of blood, and thereupon a bonnet composed of bay and holly leaves all proper, within an orle of eight that of
martlets sable.
—
Two
cadets entered arms at the
same time
Whytlaw has the head full faced and without the bonnet. The arms as borne by James of that Ilk were registered
;
Francis of
as a quarter-
by William Hairstons of Craigs, co. Dumfries. Arms borne by the Right Honourable William Ewart Gladstone
ing in 1720,
—
argent, a savage's head affront^e distilling drops of blood, about the temples a wreath of holly vert, within an orle flory gules, all within eight martlets his father, Sir John Gladstone, originally Gladstones, descended from a family resident in Lanarkshire, in the neighbourhood of the lands, in the barony of Carnwath, from which the surname was taken.
sable
;
In 1296 Herbert de Gledestan of Lanarkshire swore fealty to Edward I.; Sir William was a prisoner in England 1357, when his wife, Alice, had a safe-conduct to visit him he was released soon after, and died about 1364; a protection was granted in 1363 to his wife and children, and in 1365 his son and heir, William, had a Crown charter of lands near ;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
211
John of Gledstains had a charter of Hundleshope, Peebles, from Robert III., on the resignation of his mother, Margaret, and this propertywas still in the possession of John of Cocklaw in 15 19, when his grandson John was contracted in marriage to Janet, daughter of Sir Walter Scott of Branxholm. The Cocklaw family retained the designation of that Ilk after their Lanarkshire estate passed from them in the sixteenth century, and somePeebles.
times are designed barons of Gledstaines. They figure in the history of the Borders, sometimes as disturbers of the peace, sometimes as consulted by the privy council as to the preservation of order; in the ballad of the Raid of Reidswire is mentioned " Gledstone good at need." Cocklaw was besieged, without success, by the English in 1403. In 1561 Mr John, who possessed land in Quothquan, was a member of the privy council the end of his nephew and heir, John, Ormond " Four heraldis sitting drinking, twa Pursuivant, happened thus in 1596; of them fell in words, viz., John Purdie and John Glaidstainis, the said John Glaidstainis stikit John Purdie at the table and the said Glaidstainis being apprehendit, he was beheidit upone the 25th day of the same moneth of November, for the same slauchter." He left a son, George, living 162 1, and then in possession of his patrimony in Lanarkshire. Craigs was in 1440 the property of John Gledstanes; his descendant, John, was dead in 1619, leaving two coheiresses, of whom Elizabeth married Matthew Hairstons. From this branch came Herbert, a colonel in the Swedish service, who was recognised as noble in that country in 1647 ^^s son married Brita Natt ach Dag, a maid of honour; Adam, the last male of the family, was taken prisoner at Pultowa, and died in Siberia. Herbert sat in ;
;
;
parliament for Kirkcudbright 1579.
*VlLLMURE. *Seres.
94.
*Halyday.
There
an
entry of the funeral of Sir John Halliday of Tulliebole, advocate, 8th March 1619, when four quarters «nly 95.
is
official
—
He married Helen crest a boar's head argent. displayed Oliphant, and their initials are cut over the entrance door of Tulliebole " The Lord is Castle, with the date, 2nd April 1608, and the motto (?)
were
;
—
my
defence
"
;
his
arms are a chevron between three
cinquefoils,
and on
it
a crescent. In 1775 Robert Douglas Halliday of Coldbrook, in the island of St Croix, was recognised as heir male of the family, and registered arms argent, a sword erect proper hilted and pommelled or, the pommel within a crescent gules, on a canton azure a saltire of the field; motto " Virtute
—
—
parta." This motto is given by Stacie, and he adds the canton with the " saltire is for ane reward ;" Porteus gives the sword and crescent for the name, and mentions the canton as an addition for the Tulliebole family ;
WORKMAN'S
212
MS.
must then have been granted after 1608, and at the same time probably the arms altered. In the churchyard of Canonbie there is a Halliday coat cut in stone a sword erect and in chief three crescents. *Makbeth. In 1678 arms founded on this coat were allowed to Abraham M'Beth, merchant in Lx)ndon. *Makduf. See Mackay. *Eleis. Seal of Robert Ellous 1359 a lion rampant debruised of a it
—
—
bend, in sinister chief a mullet these bearings are nearly identical with those of Fairlie. Another coat is given in F. E. Mr James Ellis of Sauchton Mills, ;
—
Edinburgh, registered 1672-78 ^gules, a sword in bend argent At the same time James Ellies of Southside between two helmets or. or, three helmets beavers open proper, with a crest which registered rather belongs to the other coat, a hand gauntleted grasping an adder near
—
(? eel)
proper.
Mr
—
Ellies of Ellistoune, advocate, 1672-78 azure, three eels naiant fessways in pale argent ; Ellistoune is in West Lothian, and this family is said to be of English origin.
John
that Ilk, co. Fife. Vert, on a chevron argent three treefoils slipped of the field. *FiSHER. Porteus has azure, a chevron between three salmon argent, and this is the coat quartered by Forman for Fisher, it is said.
Bakaske, or Balcaskie of
—
—
Seal of William Fisher, burgess of Edinburgh 1567 three fishes naiant in pale. Arms granted, c. 1740, to Robert of Newhall azure, on a chevron argent between two otters' heads erased in chief and a salmon naiant
—
in base proper, three stars gules.
Thomas John
represented Edinburgh in parliament 1600. Fisher in Drygrange acquired Housebyres
daughter and Dickson, and
heir of
Andrew
1642
;
Marion,
of Housebyres, married, in 1783, Archibald
left issue.
*CocHRAN. See A. Tempiltoun. Gules, a temple or church argent, on a
96.
a mullet
or.
Name
illegible
—gules,
chief sable
a bird wings expanded drinking out of a
a garb or. CuMYNG. Azure, three garbs *Lethe. See G. Harcas of yt Ilk. See A.
well, in dexter chief
;
or.
sable,
a chevron between three fleurs-
de-lis or.
Mychell. See F. Seal, 1455, of Thomas Mychal, bailie of St Andrews— an eagle displayed. The coat here and in F. is one of the bearings of the old family of St Michael, whose heiress seems to have married Henry Kerr, Sheriff of Roxburghshire 1359, and secondly. Sir John Maxwell of Pollok. The Kerrs have since borne the mascles as a quartering or composed with
Out***"*
their
own
arms.
WORKMAN'S MS. Porteus gives Mitchael — —parted per pale or and
213
a fess between three gules, a fess and three
for
sable,
mascles or; and also mascles counterchanged. In the various matriculations for Mitchell the coat is almost always one sable, a fess between three mascles or, with additions or variations has a chevron in place of the. fess. ;
The
baronetcy, which was conferred in 1724 on John Mitchell of Westshore, in Shetland, is claimed by James William Mitchell, Rothesay Herald, as descended from his youngest son, John Charles. To this
family belonged Sir Charles, Commander in the Naval Service of the East India Company, who died in 1808, and his brother Sir Andrew, K.B., who died in 1806, Admiral of the Blue. David Mitchell was Bishop of Aberdeen 1662-63; Sir Andrew of
Thainston, co. Aberdeen, K.B., was Envoy at the Court of Frederick the Great of Prussia. John Mitchell of Craigend, co. Stirling, who died in 171 1, left a son, Alexander, Writer to the Signet, designed of Mitchell, when he recorded arms 17 19; his son by Alison, daughter and coheir of Alexander Livingstone of Parkhall, assumed his mother's surname and arms, and is rei corded, 1766, as William Livingstone of Parkhall. St Michael, the archangel, is the crest of some branches of the Mitchells.
—
Spittell. L. seal of Alexander, parson of Liberton 1598 a fess between two boars' heads erased in chief and an eagle displayed in base, a crescent in the honour point. ;
Arms
in Balfour's
MS.
for the old family of Spittal of Leuchat, in in chief three crescents gules.
Fife—argent, an eagle displayed sable
Edward
sat in parliament 1503-25. Leuchat was erected into a barony in 1695 for Alexander Spittal ; his descendant, James, died in 1796, leaving a daughter and heir, Elizabeth,
who
married Robert Bruce Dundas of Blair. Leuchat was the seat of William Spetell in 1457, and John de Spitale held lands in Kinross-shire 1395, granted by David II. to Walter de Spittall in the thirty-sixth year of his reign. Robert Spittel, tailor to Margaret, Queen consort of James IV., founded the bridge at Doune, co. Perth, in 1585, and placed on it a stone with an inscription, and his arms an eagle displayed between two (perhaps three, the stone being much worn) crescents in chief and a pair of
—
tailor's shears
open in base. QuHiTFURDE. L. ouc garb in chief only. In 1704 Sir Adam Whytefoord of Blairquhan registered argent, a bend cottised sable between two garbs gules, that in base being added for
—
;
difference.
Colonel Walter had recorded the same 1672-78, three crosses pat^e of the field on the bend "being added at his Majesties speciall command;" his father had been Bishop of Brechin. The surname is taken from lands near Paisley. Walter witnessed a
3H
'
WORKMAN'S
214
charter of Alexander III. in 1263 Ilk and Milton c. 1688.
;
MS.
the elder line failed in Sir
John of
that
Robert was Abbot of Crossraguel 1491, which led to the settlement of some of his kinsfolk in Ayrshire John sat in parliament for Irvine the barony of Blairquhan 1586. John, son of David in Balloch, acquired 1622, which descended to Sir Adam above named, who was created a baronet 1701 ; Sir John, third baronet, sold all the estates, and died before November 1803, leaving coheirs, who married Henry Cranstoun, and Colonel Esq., Henry Lord Vernon, David Kennedy of Kirkmichael, Francis Cunynghame. He and his father were styled of Whytefoord. Added in ink argent, a naked man 98. BoRNETT in Lidesdale (?). on a cutting a tree growing from a mount in base vert with a long sword, chief azure a crescent between two mullets argent. NicoLSONE. Sir John has been added, then scored out, and of ;
—
Carnock written. Gules, a lion's head erased between three hawks' heads erased, a
bordure engrailed
or.
There seems to be some confusion between this name, which is sometimes spelt Barram (? Balram) and Baron. Sir J. Balfour gives, Barrame sable, a cross between four fleurs-deBarrone or, three martlets sable Barone ^gules, a chevron azure lis or Barrone of Kynaird, in Fyfeshire, fretty argent between three garbs or 1559 or, a chevron sable degoutted argent between three merles gules. Porteus adds a double tressure and omits " degoutted." In 1788 Alexander Baron of Preston, co. Linlithgow, registered arms evidently taken ^argent, a chevron gules between three martlets sable from the coat here represented, although he is said to be descended from Jean Baron, who accompanied Mary of Guise to Scotland. There are in France several families of Baron, le Baron, Baronnie, The Barons &c., but their arms do not resemble the Scotch coat at all. of Preston are represented in the male line by Alexander Seton of Preston, and of Ekolsund in Sweden. John Borrowman or Barrowman of Nether Stewartoun left a daughter and heir, Margaret, 1687. In 1296 Matheu de Balran of Fife swore fealty to Edward I.; Patrick Barroun, burgess of Edinburgh, and Margaret Liddale, his spouse, had a charter of Spittalfield, co. Fife, 1477 he was Provost of Edinburgh, long sat in parliament, was knighted, and died c. 1488 Patrick of Spittalfield represented Edinburgh, and was depute-constable 1526-48; John of Spittalfield c. 1560; James was Provost of Edinburgh, and sat in parliament 1567-68 others of the name held the offices of depute-constable and depute-marischal. James of Pitteuchar left two 99.
;
*Barraman.
—
—
;
—
—
;
—
;
;
;
;
coheirs in 161 o.
James Baron, merchant
Edinburgh, married Elizabeth, granddaughter of Mr Robert Leslie of Innerpeffer, advocate, who had acquired Kinnaird about 1535; their son, George of Kinnaird 1587-1606, sold the estate to Sir Michael Balfour. in
WORKMAN'S
MS.
215
Sir Patrick, in 1478, founded a chaplainry in the church of St Giles', Edinburgh, reserving the patronage to himself and his heirs, and provid-
ing quod cum fuerit capellanus ydoneus parentele tnee Baroun gerens ante alias presentetur. Lyntoun. L. There was a family of Linton of
vel hoc cognomen Pittendreich, co;
Perth.
—
Porteus gives for Linton of Drumcreich this and another coat gules, a cross crosslet argent, two stars of the same under each of the upper nooks, and a crescent under each nook thereof or (?). Balfour has a blazon nearly the same, but in his drawing the stars are omitted altogether, and the cross is between four crescents.
Hannay,
Argent, a cross crosslet fitchde sable issuing from a crescent gules, between three stags' heads cabossed. This is much and the name originally was Livingston of East Wemyss. defaced, Cader. Given in L. for Kedzo. 1255, William de Cadyow was removed from the King's Council. 1296, Adam de Cadiou, of Lanarkshire, swore fealty to Edward L John sat in parliament 1440.
*EwiNG.
A chevron
between three stars are the arms on a tombstone in Bonhill churchyard, with the date 1600. Nisbet gives as W. for Ewing of Keppoch and Craigtoun, with the sun in base. Robert, last of Craigtoun, was dead in 1781, when his heirs were his sisters
— Elizabeth, wife
of Rev.
John
Bell,
and Agnes, wife of Edward
Edinburgh.
Inglis,
James Ewing of Keppoch sold the estate, and d.s.p. 1824 his nephew and heir, Alexander, merchant in Glasgow, registered arms 1869, quartering Bontine of Ardoch as heir general of that family. The blazon is ;
—argent, a chevron embattled azure ensigned with a banner gules, charged
with a canton of the second, thereon a saltire of the first, all between two mullets in chief and the sun in his splendour in base of the third, a bordure of the second. Young. L. see also B. Seal of William, 152 1 three piles each charged with an annulet, in base an escallop. John, bailie of Edinburgh 1578, seals with three piles and Sir Peter of Seaton, tutor to James VL, has an annulet on each pile, and a crescent for crest. His descendant. Young of Auldbar, bore argent, three piles sable, as many annulets of the first in chief crest a lion rampant gules holding a This was sword in his paw proper "Great God governe." motto three- annulets altered at the matriculation by Peter of Auldbar, 1672-78 or being placed on a chief; moiio-^" Robore prudentia pnsstat." note " is appended, Which coat is declared to be ye paternall of ye name of Young," apparently making him head of the family. Young of Leny first bore the three piles in point, each charged with an annulet, on a chief argent three martlets sable crest a dolphin naiant " In every poynt," or " Thus in every point." At the proper motto
—
;
;
;
;
—
—
—
A
;
—
general registration this was altered to
;
—argent,
—
on three
piles sable
as
WORKMAN'S MS. —a dexter arm holding a lance
2i6
annulets or crest " Press through."
many
motto—
;
in
bend proper
;
family ended on the death, by drowning, of Robert of that place, in or before 1753, when his sisters became coheirs. They in merchant Montrose of Robert widow in ; Ann, were, Ochterlony, 1767, in Brechin and merchant Clementina Margaret, wife of John Smith,
The Auldbar
;
;
Mary. Sir Peter,
who
acquired Seaton
1580, was knighted 1605, and son, Sir James, was father of Peter c.
His died in 1628, aged eighty-four. Auldbar was acquired. Parts of Leny, in the who sold Seaton 1670, and county of Edinburgh, were acquired 1610-23 by two brothers and a sister; Thomas Young, writer to the signet ; John, also writer to the signet, and
town-clerk of Edinburgh and Isobel, wife of Robert Peirson, flesher in the Canongate. Thomas eventually became proprietor of these separate who acquired parts, and left a son, John, farmer of excise and customs, He died in 1690, and his son, the rest of Leny, and was knighted. ;
Major Thomas, sold Leny 1695. 1327, Ralph Yong, Provost of Crail John Yonge of Dingwall 1342 Walter represented Edinburgh in parliament 1468-71 George, Archdeacon of St Andrews and Ambassador to Denmark 1585-97 James, depute-constable 1534; Alexander, Bishop of Edinburgh 167 1, of Ross 1679-84 John, Bishop of Argyll 1661 Sir Thomas of Rosebank died ;
;
;
;
;
;
in 17 1 2, leaving issue.
Arms
granted 1773 to a family of Youngson in Ireland, of Scottish descent, were founded on the Young coat, and some MSS. give the bearings of Younger of Hopperston or Harperden, which are very similar. Porteus gives this with the hair of the mermaid 100. *MuDiE. sable also, azure a chevron ermine between three pheons argent, which The latter coat, with a bordure indented argent for is given farther on. difference, was registered 1672-78, by James Muidie of Arbeckie, co. Forfar to this family belonged Sir Thomas Mudie, Provost of Dundee,
—
;
;
and James, who represented Montrose
in parliament 1689- 1702.
The name appears the direct line ended
in Forfarshire early in the fifteenth century, and on the death of John Mudie of Pitmuies in 1876.
William Moodie or Mudy, Bishop of Caithness, died 1460; he and Gilbert Mudy were among the benefactors to the monastery of St Anthony at Leith, where mass was sung for the repose of their souls. Mr William Mudie was appointed Chamberlain to the Queen in His grandson, Orkney 1561, and acquired the estate of Breckness. James, designed of Melsetter, was ancestor of James Moodie, who sold It was purchased by Robert Heddle, who married a Melsetter in 1818. daughter of Major James Moodie, and their grandson, John George Moodie Heddle, is now of Melsetter. The arms of this family of Moodie are azure, a chevron ermine between three pheons pointing upwards argent, a bugle in chief or. To this a second son of Melsetter, James, Captain in the Royal Navy, was, in 1720, allowed to add as a coat of augmentation in the first
—
WORKMAN'S
MS.
217
quarters, gules, a castle argent ensigned with a ducal crown, between three ships of war with sails furled or, for his signal service in relieving Denia in Spain, when besieged by the French in 1707.
and fourth
Ronald. proper, on a
Argent, a lion passant gardant gules chained to a tree Arms slightly differenced chief azure a crescent argent. were registered 1672-78, by Robert, Provost of Montrose John sat for that burgh in the first parliament after the Restoration. loi. Carros. Argent, on a bend azure three fish of the field given in K. for Glaides. ;
;
Arms
*Calderwood.
closely
resembling
these were
registered 1672-78, by Alexander, bailie of Dalkeith, and by William of Pittedie, in Fife; in 1736 Thomas of Polton, co. Edinburgh, grandson of the Dalkeith bailie, had his arms altered to— ermine, on a saltire gules
between four palm branches slipped proper five mascles or. The ermine is no doubt to commemorate his father, Sir William, who was a judge, with the title Lord Polton, 171 1-33, and the mascles are taken from the bearing of the family of his mother, Margaret, daughter of Thomas Leirmont, advocate. The Calderwoods were settled at Dalkeith 1566; Anne, heiress of Polton, married in 1753 James Durham of Largo, co. Fife,
and the
estate
Sir Archibald
now belongs
to
Mrs Dundas Calderwood Durham.
was steward of the Household
to
James IV. 1490;
Isobele de Calrewode of Lanarkshire swore fealty to Edward L 1296. Graham of Fantre. On a chief indented sable three escallops or. Mr Laing described the seal of Robert of Fyntre, 1478, as having the chief
engrailed
;
crest
—an eagle's head and wings.
The
indentation became afterwards three piles. *Veitch of Dawick. Seal of Andrew of Stewarton 1605 three cows' heads erased sometimes one head only was borne. William le
—
;
1296 swore fealty to Edward L Nisbet quotes a charter of Archibald, Earl of Douglas, to Barnabe le Vach de Dawyk 1407 Sir John of Dawick was Master of His Majesty's Works, represented the county of Peebles in parliament, and had a charter of the barony of Dawick 1635; he was ruined by advancing money to the king, and his son and grandson had, as some compensation, the office of
Vache of Peeblesshire
in
;
;
presenter of signatures. William of Elliock, co. Dumfries, writer to the signet, died in 1747 his son, James, a Senator of the College of Justice, d.s.p. 1793, and was succeeded by his cousin, Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Veitch.
;
*CuRE.
These are the charges on the
seal of
Clement Cor,
bailie of
given in MSS. and name, which is said to be French. Clemens Cor sat in parliament for Edinburgh 1593-96; in -one MS. he is styled Knight of the Golden Spurs, and had a daughter who married into the family of Lumsden of Blanerne. gules, a Funeral Escutcheons for the
Edinburgh 1560
;
stag trippant or,
is
*WlLSON. 102.
*Craik.
John, merchant burgess of Fraserburgh, registered 31
2
1
WORKMAN'S
8
MS.
—
arms 1672-78 per fess azure and sable, a ship under sail or, masts, sails, and tackling proper. In 1296 Henry Crak of Dumfriesshire, James de Crak of Selkirkshire, and John of the county of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. charter of confirmation of a charter of 1329, John de Crake first Matthew de Crake, Ayrshire, 1365, year of the reign of Robert II. Crake de and the to to safe-conduct others, envoys John Pope English and King of France in the sixteenth century the name occurs frequently ;
;
;
in Dumfriesshire.
William, merchant burgess of Dumfries, was repeatedly Provost, and sat in parliament for the burgh 1678-81, acquired Duchrae 1676, and Arbigland 1678; he died in 1697. His elder son, Adam of Arbigland, was father of William of Arbigland, an eminent agriculturist, who died in 1798; his sister's son, Douglas Hamilton-Craik of Arbigland, left a son, John,
who
sold the estate,
and died 1877.
of Duchrae, second son of the Provost, left a son, Adam of Duchrae, who left two daughters, but the estate went to his sister, Jean, who married John Stewart of Castle Stewart, and died in 1762, leaving
Adam
issue.
Another family of Dumfries merchants were of Stewartoun, and ended in three coheiresses, 1698.
*HoRN.
Motto added,
"
Home, of ould — argent, a
Holde fayst Nydsdale"
Stacie
has,
chevron between three tyres of a stag's head sable also. Home of Colfadock, in Nithsdale argent, a chevron between three tyres of harts' horns barways sable crest a hart's head couped or motto " Hold fast." attired sable
—
;
—
;
—
;
Mr James Home
Aberdeen, minister at Elgin, fess waved and cottised azure between argent, registered arms c. two unicorns' heads couped in chief, and a bugle in base gules, garnished of the first and stringed of the third crest a bugle azure garnished and " Monitus munitus." stringed as the former motto In 1725 his son, Mr John Horn of Westerhall, advocate, had these arms altered to or, three hunting-horns gules crest two horns con'' Moneo joined parted per fess or and sable counterchanged ; motto et muneo." of
Westerhall, a 1680—
;
—
;
—
A
co.
—
;
—
—
notice, nearly six pages long, of the surname of Horn, " Heraldry." It mentions Jupiter, appeared in the Appendix to Nisbet's
pompous
Bacchus, Pyrrhus, the Cornuti of Rome, the Cornari of Venice, the de Comu of France, the Horns of Brabant and Sweden, Robert Horn, " Mirror of Bishop of Winchester, and Andrew Horn, author of the Justice."
In Scotland John a'Horn, a cadet of the Counts of Horn of Brabant, is said to have made his appearance to congratulate David II. on his to have married Janet, cousin of that release from captivity in England Eraser of Cowie and to have William king, and supposed daughter of Sir ;
;
had a Crown charter of the lands of Glenlyon, which were held by his descendants till after James I.'s return from England.
WORKMAN'S
MS,
219
This is a good example of " a lie with a circumstance." The charter, which is in the Great Seal Register, and has been printed, is dated 12th March, thirty-ninth year of the reign of David II. it is in favour of John de Loorne, and Janet, his wife, and no Horn ever possessed ;
Glenlyon.
we ask for a reason for the change of arms and pretension to high " " descent, it may be answered that something had happened since the If
clergyman had a grant of arms. In 1722 Lady Mary Bruce married the Prince of Horn, whose arms were or, three hunting-horns gules garnished argent, the mouthpieces
—
turned to the sinister side.
This distinguished family took their surname from their lordship of Horn, near Ruremonde, a fief of the Duchy of Brabant ; can be traced to the twelfth century were hereditary grand huntsmen of the empire, counts ;
of the empire 1450, and princes 1677. The last of the elder branch, James, Count of Horn, adopted his stepsons, who were Montmorency-Nivelles, and took the name they were both beheaded Philip, Count of Horn, at Brussels in 1568, and the Baron of Montigny at Simancas in 1570.
—
;
The second Prince
of Horn, a grandee of Spain of the first class, had two sons the younger, Antony, Count of Horn, was broken on the wheel on the Place de la Gr6ve, in 1720, for robbery and murder com;
mitted in Paris
the elder, Maximilian
;
Emmanuel, Prince and Knight of
the Golden Fleece, married, as already stated, a daughter of the Earl of Elgin and Aylesbury, and left two coheirs the elder married, in 1742, ;
the Prince of Salm-Kyrbourg, the younger became Princess of StolbergGuedern, and her daughter married Prince Charles Edward Stuart.
In Scotland the settled at
Thomanean,
John Horn, Esq.
name
is
uncommon.
in Kinross-shire,
Mr James Horn
In
which
1578 John is
now
Horn was
the property of
bought Westerhall 1674
;
his son
John, in 1733, entailed his estate, taking the designation of Horn of Horn, married Anne, daughter of Viscount Arbuthnott, and left an heiress, Anne, who married Hew Dalrymple, a senator of the College of Justice as Lord Drummore her eldest son, Hew Horn of Horn, was succeeded by his brother, Robert Horn of Horn, who married Mary Elphinstone, heiress of Logic, and assumed her surname in addition. Their eldest son, James, registered arms, quartering Horn, and with the crest and motto of that family only, 1790 his brother and heir. Sir Robert ;
;
Dalrymple Horn- Elphinstone of Horn and Logic Elphinstone, baronet, registered arms 1828, also quartering Horn, and with the crests- of the three families he was allowed supporters a bull sable armed and unguled or, and an eagle with wings expanded sable armed or. *Spottiswoode of that Ilk another coat given from this MS. This, however, was used by John, Archbishop of St Andrews 1615-39;
—
;
;
Mr
Laing describes the trees as "growing from a mount;" Porteus blazons them broken boughs.
Mr
Alexander, advocate, of Crumstain, 1672-78, registered
—argent,
WORKMAN'S
220
MS.
on a chevron gules between three oak trees vert a boar's head couped of a wolf's head couped proper motto " Patior ut crest the field
—
—
;
;
Potiarr In 1814 his representative, John of that Ilk, registered these arms, making the boar's head or crest an eagle rising proper looking at the same motto supporters two naked savages sun in his splendour wreathed about the head and middle with laurel, each holding a club over
—
;
;
—
;
his shoulder proper.
Pont and Balfour give the coat with the three garbs, which appears to be the old bearing that with the branches or trees in W. has rather the " appearance of being a later addition, and on the margin is written oak trees branches," and below the shield, "Bishop Spotswood of St Andrews three stoags or three branchs of an oak tree, or scrogs." The family is an old one, taking its surname from Spottiswoode, co. Berwick, which was erected into a barony early in last century; in 1296 Robert de Spotteswod swore fealty to Edward I. The printed accounts of the Spottiswoodes are incorrect.; the following is an attempt to clear up the confusion. ;
—
David of that
Ilk died in
September 1570 appointed ;
Mr
John, parson married
of Calder, one of his executors, not specifying his relationship Tane Brounfield ^
;
!
in or before
I
I
I
NiNiANof that
Ilk died 1
588.
George was murdered in
1588, married
June
William and Alexander both alive 1602.
Mr John,
I
parson
of
Longformacus 1588.
Christian Thomson. I
Agnes William
living 1603.
Elizabeth died unmarried,
John sold
of that Ilk d.s.p.
Spottiswoodebenothing further known of him.
about 1603.
fore 1624
;
he was succeeded in the estate by his cousin, the Archbishop, who sold it the prelate never held Spottiswoode, which was purchased in 1700 by his great-grandson. Mr John Spottiswoode, parson of Calder, and superintendent of Lothian, born 1510, entered at Glasgow University 1534 as servus Domini Rectoris, not as son of the laird of Spottiswoode, which he certainly would have been styled if he had been so he is stated to have been son of William of that Ilk, and uncle of Ninian above named; in his will he appoints Ninian of that Ilk oversman without calling him his nephew, and, as David of that Ilk, appoints Mr John one of his executors; it seems certain that he was related to the heads of the family, but not so closely as has been alleged. Father Hay, who was his descendant, and was also descended from Jean, daughter of William of that Ilk, does not call him a son of that It is stated that
;
;
family.
The
superintendent's offspring rose to distinction ; the Archbishop was Chancellor of Scotland, and James, the younger son, was Bishop of
Clogher, and founded a family in Ireland.
WORKMAN'S
MS,
221
Sir John of Dairsie and New Abbey, eldest son of the archbishop, had besides his son, Captain John, who was executed in 1650, two other Sir Robert of New Abbey and Dunipace, sons, both military officers. brother of Sir John, was forfeited and executed ; his son, Mr Alexander, is, by Nisbet, said to be heir male of Spottiswoode of that Ilk, but the Lyon Register does not so style him. His son, John, was the purchaser of Spottiswoode, which is now the property of Lady John Scott, nde Spottiswoode, but this family is represented by her niece, Helen Spottiswoode, wife of Captain Charles Herbert, as heir general, and by her cousin, William Spottiswoode of Coombe Bank, Sevenoaks, as heir male. Dunipace was acquired by a family of the name, who are in the Lyon Register called descendants of Spottiswoode of that Ilk. In Ayrshire, John of Quhitele held lands 1483; William was concerned in the murder of the Earl of Cassilis 1527 Fowler, in the parish of Mauchline, was the seat of Spottiswoodes for several generations. *Clan Chattan, or M'feerson's coat, or Gillespie. Pont has this for M'Phearson, but gives M'Intosh, as the chief of ;
Clan Chattan
—
a lymphad oars erect in saltire sable, in chief a dexter hand couped fessways, holding a man's heart (some say a fleur-de-lis) paleways. On I2th March 1672, Sir Charles Erskine, Lyon, confirmed to " the antient Baron the Laird of Clunie, M'Phersone, the only and true representer of the antient and honourable familie of the Clan Chattone," the arms here depicted crest a cat sejant proper motto " Tutch not the Catt, but a Glove ;" supporters two highlandmen in short tartan jackets and hose, with helmets on their heads, dirks at their left sides, and targets on their exterior arms, their thighs bare and shirts tied between them. The laird of Macintosh objected to this, as he claimed the chiefon 26th November, ship, and the Privy Council decided in his favour the same without were matriculated for arms, supporters, accordingly, or,
;
—
—
—
;
;
"
Duncan M'Phersone of Clunie." The present Cluny Macpherson,
in 1873, obtained the sanction of which his ancestor had been unnecesto the of carry supporters Lyon sarily deprived, as, if his chiefship of the whole Clan Chattan was disputable, he was certainly chief of the Macphersons.
held their lands of the house of Huntly, and in 1609 had a bond of manrent acknowledging Macintosh as chief, but Mr signed Skene is of opinion that this honour belongs to the Macphersons, Mackintosh being only captain of the clan. Among the families said to be branches of Clan Chattan are Gillespie ; c. 1680, Sir James Oswald was allowed to impale for his wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Mr George Gillespie, one of the ministers of Edinburgh ^azure, in base a ship under sail argent, in the sinister canton a hand gauntleted grasping a sword proper; about the same time a different coat a chevron between three roses was granted to Alexander 3 K
They
:
—
—
—
—
WORKMAN'S
222
MS.
Gillespie of Newtoun, skipper in Elie, ancestor of the existing family of Gillespie of Mountquhanie, co. Fife.
Macgillivray of Dunmaglass ; in 1626 Farquhar, son of Alister, son of Farquhar, son of Duncan, son of Anckyl, had a feu-charter of these lands which his predecessors had held from the Cawdor family they descended to the late John Lachlan Macgillivray, on whose death a curious litigation ensued as to the succession. No arms are registered for the head of the family, but in 1801 William of Montreal, a cadet, was allowed azure, a lymphad sails furled and oars in action or, flagged gules, a bordure argent on a chief of the second a buck's head cabossed sable attired of the third, between two " Be mindcross crosslets fitchde of the last the buck's head and motto, to the Thanes of Cawdor. ful," seem indicative of vassalage ;
—
;
;
The
Duncan Makfercheir
Duncanson Ferchard, 1535, has that of Alexander the attires of a stag with a mullet between them MacFarquhar, 1535, is a stag's head contournde, in base two roses; both are appended to deeds in connection with Dunmaglass and the Campbells of Cawdor. Donald of Cawdor had acquired half of Dunmaglass, in 1419, from William Menzies, being previously owner of the other half. Smith of the thirty-five coats known in Scotland for this name, only three point to descent from this Highland clan, and those are of no In 1765 John Smyth of Balhary quarters azure, a cat great antiquity. In 1768 James Smith of Camno, salient argent, and has a Gaelic motto. of had as a quartering ^azure, a cat and his cousin, Henry Smithfield, seal of
(?)
;
;
— —
sejant in a watching posture, her dexter
Fersen
;
this
surname
is
met with
paw extended in
Pomerania
argent. at the
beginning of
Some of its bearers rose to distinction in the the Swedish service during Thirty Years' War, and in 17 12 Reinhold was Count Fersen, le beau, who commanded created Count of Granhammer.
the fourteenth century.
SuWois regiment
and drove the carriage in which the royal family travelled to Varennes, was murdered by the populace of Stockholm during a riot in 1810, and the family, who bore
the Royal
the cat in their shield,
David
in the
French
service,
is extinct.
MacPherson, descended of the Invereshie family, registered, 1672-78, the Macpherson coat with marks of difference. In 1800 it was the basis of a grant made to Maclaurin Gillies, a merchant at Montego Bay, Jamaica both have as crest a cat courant Gillies
;
Giilis, alias
;
"
Touch not the cat, but a glove." The arms registered, 1672-78, by John Macpherson of
proper, with the motto,
Inveressie are
those here represented within a bordure gules, but in one of Fraser's F. E., the difference is that the shield is parted per chevron, and the hand holding the dagger is turned the other way.
No name of the
;
(?)
Langlands.
Argent, on a chevron gules two mullets
field.
Already given from page 61 here it is parted per bend gules and argent, instead of azure and or. Gules, a crescent between three 103. No name (?) Hamilton. Alison.
;
;
cinquefoils argent.
WORKMAN'S
MS.
223
No name ; (?) Seton, Unfinished, something like a garb uncoloured between three crescents gules within the Royal tressure. *Clark of Balbirny. This seems a mistake, as the proper coat of the Balbirny family is given on page 124 for Clarke; this is an addition made at a later date. Seal, 1593, of Bathia Clerk, wife of Mr John Provand, burgess of Edinburgh, and proprietor of Caldhame a chevron between two crescents in chief and a boar's head erased in base. Arms on a brass chandelier in the parish church of Montrose, presented in 1623 by Richard Clark, Vice- Admiral of Sweden, a native of Montrose quarterly, first and fourth, on a mount a tree; second and also the arms of his wife, Christina Lamb on a mount a third, checquy paschal lamb bearing a flag. Several families of the name figured in Sweden. William went there in 1607 as a captain in a Scotch regiment, son of Andrew Clerck of the county of Caithness, said to be descended from the Sheriffs of Forfarshire his sons were ennobled, and Hans Clerck, an admiral, was created a baron 1687, a title which expired on the death, in 1748, of General Baron
—
—
—
;
;
Clerck.
The
who
existing Barons Klerck descend from a goldsmith in Stockholm. Arms on the monument of Mr George Clerk, parson of Aberdour, died in 1644 a fess counter-compony, in chief a crescent between
—
two mullets,
base a boar's head erased. In 15 14 John Clerk had a charter of Braleccan, co. Argyll, from the Earl of Argyll, which remained with his descendants for nine or ten generations; arms registered 1754 or, a fess checquy azure and argent in
—
between three bears' heads sable. John Clerk, merchant in Paris, said to be from Kincardineshire, bought Pennicuik in Mid-Lothian, and registered arms 1672-74 or, a fess checquy azure and argent between two crescents in chief gules and a boar's head couped in base sable crest ^a demi-man winding a horn proper ; motto " Amat victoria curam'' His son was created a baronet, and in 1807 Sir George Clerk was allowed to use a second motto " Free for a blast," and had a grant of supporters a savage and a druid priest. Clerk or Clark appears to have become rather a common surname about the middle of the fourteenth century we meet with Provosts of Lanark, Dumbarton, Ayr, and Rutherglen. David n. granted Schenyllis, co. Ayr, to Robert Clerk of Dumbarton in and 1376 Lawrence de Haya, of Eskyndy, gave the lands of Lonyanys, in Inverness-shire, to John Clerk, in tocher with his daughter, Margaret. Nine persons called le Clerk, in 1296 swore fealty to Edward I. John Clerk of Lanark settled in Edinburgh as a burgess, and was
—
—
—
;
—
—
;
;
1413; William sat in parliament for Haddington 1467; Walter is in 1484 designed armiger John was prior of Scone 1524-44. Alexander, first of Balbirny, sat in parliament for Edinburgh 1567-81, and was provost 1579-84 had issue, James of Balbirny, Sir Alexander, bailie in
;
;
WORKMAN'S
224
MS,
and Magdalene (who married, first, Edward Lord Bruce of Kinloss secondly, Sir James Fullerton.) Sir Alexander of Pittencreiff, Stenton, and Pitteuchar, long Provost of ;
Edinburgh, sat in parliament 1621-33; married, 1598, Marion, daughter of Alexander Primrose; and died 1643, leaving issue: i. Mr Alexander of 2. James Pittencrieff, who died in 1653, leaving an only child, Marion of Balbirny, who had a son, James, who inherited Pittencrieff, married, 1659, Isobel, daughter of Thomas Alexander of Skeddoway, and had two sons, Alexander of Pittencrieff, who d.s.p., and James of Pittencrieff, 1690; ;
Mr
Gilbert of Pitteuchar, married, 1637, Agnes, daughter of David Brown of Finmount, and was dead in 1683, leaving with a younger son, Major David Clerk, father of Henry, who married in 1728 Lady Ceres, Alexander of Pitteuchar, who had a large family born between 1684
3.
and 1706. No name;
Hamilton.
(?)
A
crescent between three cinquefoils,
uncoloured.
A
Stewart.
and uncoloured
partly obliterated
Stewart, within a bordure charged with
An 104.
shield, apparently
buckles.
(?)
obliterated uncoloured shield.
Campbell of Loudoun.
Wallace of
Craigie.
L.
two savages as supporters, added
;
in ink.
Blair of Adamton. mascles of the
L.
;
argent,
on a
saltire engrailed sable
nine
first.
MuiRHEAD OF Lauchop. L. argent, on a bend azure a mullet between two acorns of the first. The seal of Andrew, Bishop of Glasgow 1465, has three acorns on the bend; and James of Bredisholm, co. Lanark, registered 1672-78 argent, on a bend azure three acorns or, a crescent ;
—
for difference.
Cleland
or Kneland of that James of that Ilk;
Ilk.
L.
—a ;
this
coat
was
registered,
1672-78, by upon a sinister " For sport." The estate was sold by Alexander glove proper motto of that Ilk, to a cadet, and in 17 17 Major William, a commissioner of customs in Scotland, as lineal representative of the elder line, recorded " Non two greythe arms; crest a falcon; motto sibi;" supporters hounds proper. Branches of this family settled in the West Indies, and had certificates of arms and descent 1692 and 1733. Nisbet mentions a seal 1498, of Alexander of that Ilk, who was killed
—
crest
falcon
;
,
—
—
—
showing the same bearings.
at Flodden, as
Osbern de Cliveland, of the county of Lanark, swore I.
fealty to
Edward
in 1296.
Grierson OF Lag. 105.
•DoBiE.
Musselburgh
—
the fess azure, crescent argent. Porteus blazons the coat of Dobie of Stonihill, near
^argent,
F.
;
three cross
crosslets
fitchde
gules,
an esquire's
helmet in fess azure. This surname is met with in Edinburgh in the fifteenth century. Richard and Marion Weir, his wife, had a charter of Stonyhill in 1600;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
225
Sir Robert, died in 1623, leaving a son and heir, Robert Dobie of Stonyhill Robert of Stonyhill, J. P. 1661, sold the
his
nephew and
heir,
;
estate soon after to Sir
PuRVES. mascles
A
William Sharp. it
mistake;
Lindsay,
is,
the
fess
between
three
or.
Pont and other MSS. have three mullets or on the chief. Sir John Kene, a priest in Edinburgh 1513; his nephew and heir was Patrick, burgess of Selkirk James was bailie of Selkirk 1618 Mr Thomas, writer in Edinburgh, was father of Mr John, W.S., who was *Kein.
;
dead in 1619, leaving to his son, shire
and
six other counties.
Name
illegible, like
Erblmein
;
Mr
Richard, a great estate in Selkirk-
—azure, a
saltire
couped surmounted
of a key paleways wards downwards and turned to the sinister, in chief a key fessways wards downwards and to the sinister, in sinister base a mullet, all argent.
*West. * Hunter.
Another coat is given from this MS. surname makes its appearance in different parts of the kingdom, and there is no reason to think that all bearing it can be traced to a
As
this
common
it
ancestor,
is
to be expected, as
is
the case, that the armorial
differ greatly.
bearings Sir James Balfour has for Hunter of Huntersland or, three cuirasses vert girdled gules this coat is not borne by any family known to me, and is to be found in no other MS. Hunter of Polmood, in Tweeddale, bore argent, three hunting-
—
;
—
horns sable, according to Balfour, but Pont and Porteus make them vert garnished and stringed gules in 1738 David, a descendant of this family, recorded argent, a chevron wavy azure between three hunting-horns vert
—
;
garnished gules. John, merchant in Ayr, descended of Hunterston, recorded c. 1685 vert, three collars or, on a chief indented argent as many bugles of the
—
stringed and garnished gules this was registered in 1824 by the descendant of his brother and heir, Adam Hunter, with a bordure for first
;
William Francis Hunter of Barjarg, advocate. In '1773 Robert Hunter of Thurston, co. Haddington, although said to be descended from a brother of John and Adam, recorded a different coat three hunting-horns and a chief charged with two boars' heads. To this branch belong the Hunter-Blairs, baronets, who have also abandoned the collars, and bear a chevron between three hunting-horns. But the principal family of the name is Hunter of Hunterston, co. Ayr, of which a notice is given elsewhere. Andrew Hunter, Abbot of Melrose, was Lord High Treasurer of Scotland 1449-57 his arms are cut on a stone at the' abbey, and are supported by two female figures, which have been described as mermaids or angels they are two croziers in saltire between two hunting-horns in The rose and mallet or mell flank, a rose in chief and a mallet in base.
difference,
—
;
;
—
are the ensigns of Melrose. 31-
WORKMAN'S
226
MS,
A
fabulous antiquity has been claimed for the Polmood Hunters; John Venator witnessed charters of lands in Peeblesshire in the reign of Alexander 11. Walter of Polmood 1439 > Robert, last of the direct line, died in 1689, leaving the estate to his natural son, whose heir, in 1765, ;
merchant in Edindisponed it on his death-bed to Alexander Hunter, heir was Elizabeth Lady burgh, a stranger in blood, whose eventual Forbes. Polmood was unsuccessfully claimed by Adam Hunter as heir male of the old family.
Dumfries; their arms are variously given in the MSS. as argent, three hunting-horns sable, with a crescent azure for difference or the horns vert garnished and stringed Duncan of Ballagan 1554; Duncan, his grand-nephew, married gules. Margaret, daughter of Sir Walter Lindsay of Balgavies, and was grand-
Another family possessed Ballagan,
co.
—
;
James of Ballagan, J. P. 1661. In Forfarshire the surname appears in the middle of the fifteenth century; Thomas of Reswallie was grandfather of David of Restennet, who registered arms 1672-78, when he is said to be descended of the father of
—
collared or, family of Hunterston ^vert, three greyhounds courant argent on a chief engrailed of the second as many hunting-horns of the first
garnished gules.
David Hunter acquired Burnside and the barony of Dod, and sat in intermarried parliament, 1643, for the burgh of Forfar his descendants of with Graham of Fintry, Gordon of Abergeldie, Douglas Brigton, &c., and only in 1876 acquired a legal right to arms, when the present William George Hunter of Burnside recorded argent, a man's heart proper ;
—
between three hunting-horns vert stringed gules. 106.
*CuK.
Studman
or
Steidman;
see
The
K.
snails are proper,
and the
leaves are those of the holly. 107.
Edgare of Tywidale,
F.
Or, six mascles, three, two, and one. L. gives for Lorene of Hairwode argent, three laurel leaves vert. In 1774 arms were granted to James Lorain of Angelraw, said to be descended from Simon Lorain, who came from the province of Lorain to
Lawen of Quaherelwod.
—
—
on a bend gules between two lions rampant vert, three alerions in bend argent. The surname appears very early in Scotland in 1 233 Roger Loren witnessed an agreement between the chapter of Moray and Sir Alan Durward; Eustache de Lorreyne and others were, in 1333, directed by
Dunse
or,
;
Edward III. to survey the Castle of Berwick; in 1368 he surrendered Roxburgh Castle to the English in 1358 the King of England granted ;
the barony of Caverton to James de Loreyns, a Scotchman. The grantee of arms was Sheriff-Clerk of Berwickshire, and died 1785, leaving a son, Alexander of Angelraw, an officer in the 42nd Regiment. ViPONT OF Carriden. Azurc, six mascles, three, two, and one or ;
the heiress married Cockburn, and her descendants quarter the coat. Seal of William de Veteriponte a star of eight points between three
—
lions
rampant
;
that of
John Wipond,
c.
1350,
is
six annulets, three, two.
WORKMAN'S and one annulets
MS.
227
and Glover's Roll of Arms has John de Vipount
;
—
^gules, six
or.
Arms
Harry Vipont of Hampstead, of Scottish three, two, and one or. to
c.
1750, granted, descent—gules, mascles, six
RiDDELL OF THAT IlK. F. Forsyth of that Ilk. Argent, a chevronel tween three
engrailed gules be-
griffins segreant azure.
LocKHART OF Bar. L. the field or (?). 108. Murehead. Azure, on a bend argent a ;
mullet gules between
two acorns vert seeded or. AccoN OF AiCKiNSYE.
Argent, a chevron sable between two cocks and a buckle in base gules. in chief sitting respectant, Mackdoual or Makdougall of yt Ilke. Argent, a lion rampant argent crowned with an antique crown or. *Pettendreich of yt Ilke. A family taking their surname from lands in Banffshire. John de Petyndrech had an English safe-conduct 1396; William of that Ilk 1472; Andrew of that Ilk 1507; his brother James, Abbot of Deer 150 1-9; Robert of that Ilk, father of John of that Robert of that Ilk 1587 John of that Ilk 1604-18. Ilk, 1547 *C0WPER. L. 109. Balbirny of yt Ilk. L. Makcullo of Cardiness. Makcullo of Mertoun. Azure, three wolves' heads erased argent. Mure of Caldwell. L. the mullets are argent. Weir of yt Ilk. As Weir of Blackwood in L,, i.e. argent, on a " " or is added as the tincture of fess azure three mullets of the field, but the field and mullets. The arms in L. were registered by George of Blackwood 1672-78, in 1734 by the Hon. Charles Hope-Weir, who had ;
;
—
;
married the heiress, in 18 15 by their grandson, James Joseph Hope-Vere of Craigiehall and Blackwood, the Vere crest being a demi-horse argent '' furnished gules; motto Vero nihil verius" His son was in 1846 allowed the crest of the Earls of Oxford instead of the horse on a chapeau gules turned up ermine a boar statant azure armed or. Porteus has for Weir of Stonebyres, 1682, the field or the stars argent, with the same motto this was recorded 1777, with a boar passant or, for crest, by John Weir-Vere, commissary general in the Island of
—
—
—
;
Dominica, heir presumptive to Captain John Vere of Stonebyres on their joint petition John Weir had obtained the Royal licence, 7th December 1 776, to take the additional surname of Vere, and bear the arms of the ;
Stonebyres family. In England we find in Charles' Roll, Simon de Ver ^gules, three cinquefoils pierced argent Glover's Roll, Simon de Veer ^gules, three cinquefoils ermine, and Robert quarterly, argent and gules at the siege of Caerlaverock, Hugh, son of the Earl Oxford, bore quarterly, or and The star is the gules, in front a white star, a bordure indented sable. also in is the which coat of Vere in Scotland, charge nearly identical with that of Mure. The first appearance of the surname in Scotland is c. 1180, when ;
—
— —
—
;
WORKMAN'S
228
Radulph de Veir, Ueir, or Uair, granted land
MS. in
Sprouston, co. Roxburgh, to the monks of Kelso, his brother Robert being a witness to the charter; Thomas dictus Were 1266; the Weirs held extensive lands in Lesmahagow, CO. Lanark, as vassals of the Abbots of Kelso, and this Thomas witnessed a resignation by Philip de Grenerig, of his lands there. Rotald Wer had a charter of part of Blackwood in 1400, from the Abbot of their Kelso. Marion, heiress of Blackwood, married William Laurie son assumed the surname of Weir, and was father of Sir George, created a baronet 1694, whose son and heir, Sir William, was father of Mrs ;
Hope-Weir. Stonebyres, also in Lesmahagow, was the seat of William Weir, who, in 1525, was murdered by Lindsay of Covington William of Stonebyres, in 1587, gave a bond of manrent to James of Blackwood, acknowledging him as his chief; Sir William of Stonebyres 1660-70; Daniel Vera, advocate, sold the estate 1842, and d.s.p. 1852. ;
Lewinsoun of yt Ilk. Azure, three cinquefoils argent. 1 10. Wellands. Azure, a dexter hand issuing from a cloud on the sinister side argent, holding a human heart proper winged of the second between the thumb and the open palm. David Weland was Sheriff-Depute of Fife 1582. *DoN OF Teith. There is added a sketch in ink, with no crescents or mullets, for Sir Alexander of Newton 1673; knight baronet, 1667, is above the coat given
in colour.
The arms
as registered are without the crescents and mullets has three crescents. The coat is, of course, an addition to the MS.
;
Pont
—
*Walch.
Pont and Porteus give for Welch argent, on a saltire sable five annulets or, which was registered in 1771 by Dr James Welsh of Cornlee, co. Dumfries, representer of an old family there. The burgh of Dumfries was represented in parliament, 1471, by Welch; Nicol Welch was Abbot of Holywood 1488. There were Welshes of Colliston, Skarr, Collin, Burnfoot, &c., in the county. Meikel or MuKEL. Added in ink gules, a chevron between three crosses pat6e fitch6e argent.
—
•Halliburton of Pitcur.
Arms
Pitcur—or, on a bend azure between
—
registered, 1672-78, by David of three boars' heads erased sable as
lozenges of the first crest a negro's head couped at the shoulders armed with a helmet proper supporters two cats proper.
many
;
;
The
—
Walter having married Catherine Chisholm, with whom he had Pitcur, of which they had a charter 1432. George of Pitcur sat in parliament 1560; Sir James is on Sir William Alexander's list, as having had sasine of lands in Nova Scotia the direct line of the 1628, but no baronetcy seems to have been created family ended on the death of Colonel James of Pitcur 1765 his daughter, Agatha, Countess of Morton, predeceased him, and her descendants are boars' heads are for Chisholm,
;
;
extinct.
To this family belonged Sir George of Fodderance, Lord President of the Court of Session 1642; George, Bishop of Dunkeld 1662-64; and
WORKMAN'S
MS.
229
George, Bishop of Brechin 1678, of Aberdeen 1682-88 probably, also, Andrew, Conservator of the Scots Privileges in the Low Countries ante 1500, believed to have been the first who held that office. L. ; the field of the second and third 111. Chalmer of Gaitgairth. ;
'
is or.
quarters
Wauchop of Nythre. Heriott of Trabrvon.
L.; motto L.
— " God gee vs graes."
Murray of Phillophaugh. L. Kennedy of Blawquhan. L. the lion is not crowned. HousTouN OF YT Ilke. L. the martlets are without ;
;
An
bills.
old family in Renfrewshire taking their surname from their free barony of Houstoun.
Sir John sat in parliament 1463, and Patrick in 1560; Patrick was director of Chancery and member of the Privy Council 1526. Sir John
was created a baronet 1668
his great-grandson. Sir John, fourth baronet, d.s.p. 1751, having sold the estate of Houstoun; his sisters were, Helen, ;
Lady Stewart of Blackhall, and Anne, wife of Colonel Cuninghame of Euterkine. The baronetcy was assumed by his cousin (?) George, resident in Georgia, who died there in 1795, without male issue. From George of Johnstone, co. Renfrew, younger brother of the first baronet, descends George Ludovick Houstoun of Johnstone, registered the arms; crest— a sandglass proper; motto
who
— "In
—
in
1869 time;"
supporters two hinds proper, anciently borne by the Houstouns of that Ilk, as chiefs of their name and free barons. 112. eagle's
*Collace of Balnamone.
head
;
motto—
"
There are added in ink, " In uelith bewar supporters ^a horse
—
;
crest
—
^an
at liberty
and a greyhound collared. Seal of John de Culas, c. 1340 a bend lozengy, in sinister chief a roundle; seal of Robert Collaise of Balnamoon 1574 three mascles in bend sinister between two saltires couped that of his son John, at the same time, bears a bend between two saltires couped and charged with three mascles. The blazons in the MSS. vary, and the coat has never
—
—
;
been registered. probably taken from CoUace in Perthshire John de CuUas was joint lord of the barony of Menmuir and owner of Balnamoon his son John before 1360 John sat in parliament for Forfarshire 161 2 Lord sold the estate c. 1632 the family intermarried with Gray, Moncur abbot of of Rollo of Slaines, Bruce, Kinloss, &c. Duncrub, Reid, * Duncan of Mote. Gilbert Duncan, in Colpnay, was father of
The surname
is
;
;
;
;
James,
tailor to
Queen Anne, who acquired Ratho and Bonnytoun,
co.
Edinburgh his son, James of Ratho, was dead s.p. 1641, when his second cousin John was his heir of line; his cousins, Robert, late in Mote of Erroll, and James in Leith, servitor to James of Ratho, were his heirs of entail ;
and provision ceeded him
The
in
coat
Robert
;
left
a son, George, in Mote of Erroll,
Bonnytoun. given by Pont and Porteus.
is
3M
That registered
who
for
suc-
William
WORKMAN'S
230
MS.
of Seaside, 1672-78, ancestor of the Earl of same without buckles.
A monument James Duncan of coheirs,
at Essie, in Aberdeenshire, to
Mairdrum, who
died 2nd
and an
his wife, escallop in base.
"
is
nearly the
ane honorabill man,"
November
—
1601, leaving three
"
lyon no claws nor
arms a boar's head erased Janet Lumsden two wolfs' heads couped
Elizabeth, Marjory, and Janet, has
—impaled with those of in chief
Camperdown,
Ross OF MOUNTGRENAN. Buchanan of that Ilk. L.
his
—
L.
113.
there
;
is
added,
tonge but degraded."
Douglas of Nythisdale. L. the ribbon sable. COLQUHOUN of LuSS. L. AUCHINLECK OF YT IlK. L. Blair of Adamton. Much defaced, but apparently a ;
saltire sable
base a bird's head
(?). charged with nine On the monument in the Greyfriars' Churchyard, 1 14. *Jaksone. 1606, of John Jackson, treasurer of the burgh 1594- 1605, is a shield with
mascles, in
three holly leaves. Sir James Balfour gives the coat here reproduced Pont gives it also, and blazons the other vert, three holly leaves couped argent. Porteus
—
has
;
—argent, three holly leaves proper or
sable.
There were Jacksons of Waterybutts and Carsegrange, co. Perth, in John sat in parliament for Ren-
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
frew 1593.
*Moncoure. are given here. blazons.
Sir David Lindsay gives two coats for the name two Farther variations are to be found among the written ;
In 1296 Andreu de Montcour, chivalier, swore fealty to Edward
I.
Moncur of that Ilk, co. Perth, and Moncur of Slaines, co. Forfar, flourished for many generations. The Homes of Ren ton, co. Berwick, baronets, 115. *Alane. quartered for Ellem gules, a pelican feeding her young argent valved
—
proper.
This was an old family in that shire, taking its surname from lands Henry de Ellom, in 1296, swore fealty to Edward I.
its
;
*Moncure of yt Hardy.
See C.
;
Ilk.
the dagger
is in
pale
and surmounts the spur rowel
in base.
Kemp of Comestoun.
L.
;
the broken fragment of the sword is
falling to the dexter.
*Wedderburn.
See B. for an older coat. Pont and Porteus both give the arms as in W., but Alexander of East Powrie registered 1672-78 argent, a chevron between three roses
—
gules.
His descendants changed the name of their estate to Wedderburn, and the direct male line ended on the death of David of that Ilk, 1761 ;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
231
Mr
Scrymgeour-Wedderburn of Wedderburn and Birkhill, is heir of line, and Sir David Wedderburn, Bart, heir male. The surname is probably taken from Wedderburn, co. Berwick Wautier de Wederburn, of the county of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward L 1296; the name appears in Forfarshire in 1476; James was ;
Dundee
1532, several of his descendants held the office of clerk of that burgh, and it was represented in parliament by James 1540, and bailie of
by Alexander 1 585- 1 62 1. James was Bishop of Dunblane 1636-38; Alexander, Earl of Rosslyn, was Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain 1793-1801.
Methven. 116,
See C.
Dog of Dunrobein's
W.
—
A sword
An
arms.
addition
in
ink,
with the
between two cinquefoils. Sir J. gules, a chevron argent between two cinquefoils ermine and a naked sword argent. The Ballingrew family had the cinquefoils argent, and the sword hilted initials
D.
Balfour has— 27.
in
bend
sinister
and pommelled or. There were Dogs, Dougs, or Doigs of Dunroben, Ballingrew, Coldoch, Cookston, Reswallie, &c. 1372, Mr Alexander Doge, vicar of Dunichen
1468, John Dog, Thomas Inchmahome Dene James Dog, 1488-98, Dog, armiger; 1478, of the wardrobe; 1523, James King's Dogge, messenger from the keeper afterwards called Jamie Dog, or Captain Dogg. Queen of Scotland, In 1552 James of Dunroben, co. Perth, was raising men in Menteith for service in France; Paul of Coldoch and Dunroben 1581-84; James ;
;
of Dunroben, father of Paul of Dunroben, 1613. James of Ballengrew was father of James of that place, who d.s.p., and David of Ballengrew 1634, whose son Paul married the sister and coheir of David Drummond of Invermay, and left a son, David of Ballengrew, who d.s.p., and Elizabeth of Ballengrew, 1703, married Hugh Macfarlane of Kirkton, and In Brechin there
had
issue.
was a burgess family at the beginning of the sixteenth century. John Doig, Provost of Brechin, was father of David'of Cookston, who married Magdalene, daughter and heir of George Symmer of Balzordie, and had a son George, who d.s.p., and four daughters
—
Christian of Balzordie, married, 1752 Sir James Carnegie, Bart., and had issue Anne, married her cousin-german, William Henry Doig, who died 1768, and had one child, Anne of Cookston, who married Walter ,
;
and was dead in 1791, when James Doig, of the island of Elizabeth, married Alexander Antigua, was served heir Magdalene Scott, merchant in Edinburgh. Cookston eventually passed to David Blair, son of David, minister of Brechin, and Christian, sister of David Doig of Cookston. *PiTCAiRN OF FoRTHER. The initials R. P. are added, and this Riddell,
;
;
corresponds with the seal used in 1578 by Robert, Commendator of Dunfermline, Archdean of St Andrews, Secretary of State, &c Sir James Balfour gives for Pitcairn of that Ilk, now of Forther
—
WORKMAN'S
232 first
and
fourth,
Ramsay
;
MS.
second and third, azure, three mascles
or, for
Pitcairn.
About this time the tinctures of the paternal coat were changed. Pont puts it in the first and fourth quarters as argent, three mascles or of that Ilk, 1672-78, recorded this, but gules and William of Forther, made the mascles lozenges. At the same time this, with a bordure engrailed gules, was registered whose by Alexander of that Ilk, but a correction adds, "of Pitcairn, father was a son of Pitcairn," thus guarding against the assumption of
—
;
the style
"
that Ilk
"
by a
cadet, although in possession of the old family
property.
taken from lands in Fife. William de Petkaran was on an assize at Dunfermline ante 1249. Peres de Petcarne swore Henry married, c. 1460, Elizabeth Ramsay, fealty to Edward I. 1296. Pitand the heiress of Forthar, family have since quartered her arms. Forther descended to cairn was sold in 1650 to John, a younger son.
The surname
is
David, physician in London, 1795. Archibald Pitcairn of Pitcairn, M.D., died in 17 13. His only son took part in the rising of 17 15, and died young, leaving several sisters coheiresses, of whom the only one who married was Janet, Countess of Kellie.
There were lands in Perthshire called Petcames or Pitcairns, which were acquired by John Pitcairn, descended from an old family of Perth burgesses; he had a grant of arms 1808 argent, an anchor azure between His only son d.s.p., and the property has been three lozenges gules.
—
sold.
Keres of yt
Argent, a cross engrailed sable between four roses gules. This is given elsewhere for Keir of Carse or Carsegrange, CO. Perth, and modern grants of arms have been founded on it. Karkettell. Argent, on a bend gules three crescents or, in chief a mullet of the second. DuREHAME. Argent, on a fess azure three mullets of the first, in base a crescent gules. See F. In 1249 Robert de Durham was one of the commissioners to settle Seal of Sir William de Dureme 1305 three the laws of the marches. " " William Aula Dunolm the mullets on a bend. Robert I. granted to lands of Monifieth with the mill, co. Forfar. Grange of Monifieth was long the seat of the Durhams, the account " of whom, in Douglas' Baronage," is incorrect; he says that William sold 1
17.
Ilk.
—
Grange, and that his male line having failed the representation devolved on Durham of Ardounie. In 1676 William of Grange was served heir special of his father, and Ochterlony says that, in his day, Grange and Ardounie both belonged to Durham, chief of the name he registered the arms as in W., but making ;
the
1672-78. Grange was sold c. 1702. James of Pitkerrow, clerk of Exchequer,
field or,
Mr
was father of Sir James of Luffness and Pitkerrow, whose son James was of Luffness and Pit-
WORKMAN'S
MS.
233
^
Jean of this family married Sir James Balfour, Lyon King of Arms; and Grizel, in 1639, married, for her third husband, John, Earl of Middleton, High Commissioner in Scotland after the restoration, and died in 1666. Her influence procured for her brother, Captain Alexander Durham, the office of Lyon King of Arms, August 1660. He was knighted, acquired Largo 1662, and died in 1663, unmarried. The arms registered for Lady Middleton are or, a fess azure between The Lord three mullets in chief and as many crescents in base gules. a a to crescent on altered his chief azure three or, Lyon bearings gules, mullets argent, which was registered by Alexander of Largo, and by Adolphus, merchant in Edinburgh, natural son of Sir Alexander, with a
kerrow 1689.
—
—
bendlet engrailed gules as a difference, 1672-78. James, fourth of Largo, registered arms, altering the field to argent and quartering Rutherford of Hunthill his son, James Calderwood-
—
;
Durham
of Largo and Pol ton, in 1792 again recorded arms first and fourth, Durham, the field argent second, Calderwood third, Rutherford of that Ilk he was allowed to place a baron's coronet below his crest, and ;
;
;
to carry the supporters of the Rutherfords
—two horses argent saddled and
bridled gules.
LuNDYE
OF THAT Ilk. See the altered coat in F. E., and another coat in L., which was that usually borne by the family. The head of the Lundins sat in parliament 1488, and Walter and his son, William, from 1560 William the Lyon
till
1590.
had a natural son, Robert of London or de Londoniis. Sir James Balfour has left a drawing of a seal of Sir Walter de London ante 1289 two piles issuing from a chief charged with three
—
over all in fess a label of three points. In the reign of Charles II. the laird of Lundin claimed to be descended from Robert of London, and obtained a Royal warrant 27th October 1679 to drop his paternal bearings and carry the Royal arms of Scotland within a bordure compony argent and azure crest a lion gules issuing from an antique crown or, holding a sword erect in his dexter paw and a thistle slipped in the sinister, both proper motto " Dei dono ?um pallets,
—
;
quod sum ;
"
—
—
;
supporters two lions gardant gules, each having a collar or with three thistles vert. charged In 1698 John Lundin of Baldester was allowed to quarter the above with the older coat, but the Lundins of Auchtermairnie, represented by Richard Lundin-Brown, Esq., and the other cadets, never bore the Royal coat.
John Lundin of
that Ilk,
who had and Duke
the Royal warrant, was John of Melfort he had married
afterwards Earl Sophia, heiress of Lundin, daughter of Robert Maitland, brother of the Duke of Lauderdale, by Margaret Lundin of Lundin. It is probable that his influential connections, rather than any proved for mark of him such a favour as the armorial pedigree, procured signal concession.
Drummond,
Robert de Londoniis
is
repeatedly called in
3N
;
Crown
chaster Jilius
by
WORKMAN'S
234
MS,
King William, and y^^/^^ by Alexander II.; there were several persons about the same time called de Lundin, Lundyn, Lundris, Londen, &c., evidently taking their surname from Lundie, co. Forfar, or from Lundin in Fife.
The Baroness Willoughby de Eresby
is
senior coheir of
Lundin of
that Ilk.
*BoDWELL. See L. II. for another coat. The seal of Adam Bothwell, 1557, afterwards Bishop of Orkney and Commendator of Holyrood, has a mullet on the chevron his son was created Lord Holyrood-house, and bore the arms without any mark of ;
cadency.
on an inquest at Peebles 1259. not the case that Richard Bothwell was Provost of Edinburgh in
Roger de Bodevill It is
the reign of
James
sat
III.
Thomas Hepburn
Smeaton family went to Tangier, in the reign of Charles II., along with the Earl of Teviot, and changed his name to Bothwell a certificate to this effect was issued in 1773 by Lyon King of the
;
of
Arms
to Captain
DiKESOUN. 1
18.
in chief
;
addition in ink
—argent, on a
and a boar's head couped
fess azure
between
in base gules, three crescents
field.
Pringill of Burnhouse.
An
Watson. fess
Bothwell, resident in Spain.
Dicksone.
An
Waddie.
two mullets of the
Thomas Hepburn
L.
L. addition in ink
—
2l
tree eradicated
surmounted of a
charged with a crescent between two mullets. L. the inescutcheon is in the centre of the shield, 119. Straton. ;
and the vair
is
more
regular.
In the matriculation of the arms of Andrew Straiton, a cadet of the Craigie family, 1672-78, the vair is altered to argent, three bars embattled azure. In 1698 Captain Charles Straton, whose father, a third son of the Baron of Lauriston, was deputy-governor of Edinburgh Castle, has the field vair and the inescutcheon charged with a fess in the form of a wall crenellde of three pieces argent, masonde de sable, rather a well-
—
selected
mark
of difference.
In 1783 his grandson, John, having become heir male of the Stratons of that Ilk, near Edinburgh, and of Lauriston, co. Forfar, registered as the chief coat argent, three bars counter-embattled azure crest a falcon " Surgere tento ;" supporters a lion or and a rising proper; motto
—
bloodhound
—
—
—
;
sable.
Alexander, James, and Thomas de Straton, of the county of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. 1296. Alexander de Straton signed the Barons' letter 1320; David II., in the thirty-ninth year of his reign, granted a charter, Alexandra de Straton consanguineo nostro, of property at Inverbervie Alexander of Lauriston sat in parliament 1463-81, and Andrew in 1560; Sir Alexander was a commissioner to treat for union with England 1604. Straton was sold about 1670, and Lauriston in 1695 the younger ;
;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
235
branch called an estate purchased by them, near Montrose, Lauriston. Kirkside was acquired late in the sixteenth century by a younger son, and has descended to Miss Janet Graham-Straton, niece of General Sir Joseph Straton of Kirkside, C.B. and K.H., paternally Muter, who d.s.p. Sir Joseph 1840. d.s.p, 18 16. in
was nephew of Joseph Straton of Kirkside, who
—
James Balfour notes the seal of Sir Richard Straton 1292 an voided vair and a canton Porteus gives this for Straton of LaurisSir
orle
ton
—
;
or,
an orle
vair, a canton gules. L. ; the lion charged on the shoulder with a of (Billie ?),
Rentoun buckle
or.
See another coat in this MS. *KiNLOCH. Sir James Balfour makes the mascles or. Pont gives another coat— azure, a shakefork or bishop's pall between three edock leaves or. Nisbet has these composed into one coat for Kinloch of Conland, representer of Kinloch of that Ilk azure, on a shakefork between two mascles in flank or and a boar's head erased in base, three Ut olhn" supporters two otters. leaves; crest a mermaid; motto A seal of David, son of Sir Henry Kynlouch, 141 8, bears a chevron between two mascles in chief and a boar's head erased in base, a mullet in middle chief. Those of Mr David Kinloch, one of the ministers of Edinburgh, and Henry, his son, 1550, show a boar's head between two mascles and a
—
—
—
—
''
—
mullet.
Nisbet describes the arms cut in stone at Lithrie, with the date 1591, as a boar's head erased between two mascles the latter charge he conjectures to have been taken as part of the bearing of their overlords, the de Quincys, Earls of Winton, from whom there are early charters in favour of John de Kindeloch. Murinus de Kindelouch witnessed a charter ;
of Seyer de Quincy, Earl of Winton, ante 12 19. The bishop's pall seems to be taken in consequence of a fancied connection with Kellach, Bishop
Andrews
of St
c,
900.
Azure, a boar's head erased between three mascles or, is the coat registered, 1672-78, by David Kinloch of Aberbothrie, co. Perth, whose descendants were afterwards designed of Kinloch, and enjoyed a baronetcy 1
685- 1 746.
The
male
Colonel John Grant-Kinloch of Logic and Kilrie in 1764 John of Kilrie registered arms azure, on a chevron argent between two mascles in chief of the second and a boar's head erased in base or, a mullet gules, a crescent for difference. Sir George Kinloch of Kinloch, baronet, descends from a younger son of Kilrie. The surname is taken from Kinloch,' co. Fife William de Kindellogh in 1296 swore fealty to Edward L; the pedigree of the family has never been satisfactorily investigated. Cruvie, which was in their possession in the thirteenth century, descended to John Kinloch, who seems to have left two or more daughters at his death, between 1479 ^"d one married John Ramsay of Colluthie, who was dead in 1491. 1491 heir
is
—
;
;
;
WORKMAN'S
236
MS.
Sir David Lindsay gives the arms of this branch of the Ramsays, with Kinloch as a quartering, viz. azure, a boar's head erased argent armed or. Elizabeth Ramsay carried half of gules between three lozenges Cnivie to her husband, David Carnegie. Janet Kinloch, daughter and one of the heirs of John, married Alexander Stratoun of the Knock, but Margaret, another coheir, is said to they were divorced before 1491 have married into the family of Sandilands, who possessed half of
—
;
Cruvie.
Heirs male were John Kinloch of Weddersbie (?), Andrew in Luthrie, who in 1529 acquired Little Kinnear, and d.s.p., m. in 1580 his nephew, George, portioner of Luthrie, was served heir male of entail to him, and was ancestor of David of Conland, who is mentioned by Sir Robert Sibbald and Nisbet as heir male his son, David of Conland, Lieutenant in Lord Strathmore's regiment, and afterwards Lieutenant of ;
;
the Castle of Edinburgh, married, c. 1707, Martha, widow of John Steuart, younger son of Sir Thomas of Coltness, baronet, daughter and heir of Alexander Wright, merchant in Edinburgh ; John, late of
Conland,
officer of
was probably
customs at Alloa, when Sir Robert Douglas wrote,
their son.
The
printed accounts of the Aberbothrie, latterly called Kinloch, family are not accurate; the founder, was David, who was appointed 21st March 1596, acquired the barony of Aberphysician to James
VL
bothrie and other lands, and died loth September 16 17, in the fifty-seventh year of his age he was son of John Kinloch, who married a daughter of Ramsay of Balnabreich, by Janet, daughter of Sir David Lindsay of ;
Edzell John was son of William Kinloch, who married a lady of the name of Hay, and died in 1588 they are said to descend from a younger son of Kinloch of Cruvie. The Kinlochs of Gilmerton are from a family of Edinburgh burgesses, and seem to be of the same family as the minister ;
;
whose seal has been noticed. *Spotswood. Flechour. Argent, on a fess azure between three mullets in chief a and martlet in base gules, a boar's head erased or. See C. and G. *HoMMYLL. Mr Laing gives a seal of unknown date of Gilbert there,
Hanmel
— a lion rampant.
—
Another coat is argent, a bend between a crescent gules and a fleurde-lys azure, or sometimes between two crescents gules. William of Hammyll was falconer to the King 1264. Robert Hommyle had a charter of Roughwood, co. Ayr, 1452 these lands were sold in 17 13, by Hugh Hammill. Mr Dobie describes a ;
—
second, a crescent third, a quarterly, first, a mullet fourth, a fleur-de-lis ; crest, apparently a fleur-de-lis. Another,
shield there as
shakefork
;
;
;
—
much
defaced, has apparently the same arms with the date 14 said that there is a carving showing two serpents as supporters. The heiress married Montgomery of Craighouse.
.
It is
acted as bailie for Sir John Montgomery, and the family were closely connected with that house; Hugh Hammill of
In 1413 John
Homyl
WORKMAN'S
MS.
237
Roughwood went to Ireland with Hugh, first Viscount Montgomery of Ards, and the name is still represented in that kingdom. 120. WoD OF YE Craig. Azure, a tree eradicated proper, with a hunting-horn sable stringed gules pendent from the branches, a bordure engrailed or.
.
*WiLKiE. An added coat, with the letters I.M.W. Arms on the monument at St Andrews of Mr James, Principal of St Leonard's College, who died in 1590, aged seventy-eight, and on that of his nephew, Mr Robert, Rector of the University of St Andrews, who died in 161 1 a fess wreathed between a mullet in chief and a crescent in base. They descended from a family seated at Rathobyres, in Mid-
—
Lothian, from the beginning of the fourteenth century till the present day in 1540 the property was held by George, Walter, and Margaret Wilkie, the latter being relict of James Winram, and mother of John Winram, prior of the Augustines at St Andrews, and superintendent of Fife, who
;
patronised his cousin, Robert Wilkie above named. One line of the Wilkies of Rathobyres ended on the death of Robert, whose heirs, in 1643, were his sisters, Agnes, wife of William Fairholm,
and Sarah, wife of James Granger. The other line was represented in the beginning of last century by David of Rathobyres, who sold the estate to his younger son, the Rev. Patrick; the eldest son was great-grandfather of Sir David Wilkie, painter in ordinary to their Majesties George IV., William IV., and
who
Victoria,
died unmarried
1841
;
the family
is
represented by his
nephew.
The Rev. was succeeded Rathobyres on
Patrick of Rathobyres, and of Gilchriston, co. Haddington, in these estates by his eldest son, James, who settled his third son, the Rev. Daniel Wilkie, one of the ministers
the present proprietor; William of Tyne House, CO. Haddington, eldest son of James, left three sons Captain William, who died in 1875, leaving issue; George, M.D., who married Maria, daughter of Edward Viscount St Vincent and James, C.A., who
of Edinburgh, whose son
is
—
;
died in 187 1, leaving issue. Captain Patrick Wilkie of Ratho Mill, in the Island of St Vindent, married in 1767 Jean, daughter of John Napier of Culcreuch; four years afterwards he, although a Scotchman descended from a family which had borne arms certainly for upwards of two hundred years, took the rather singular step of obtaining a grant of arms in favour of himself and the other descendants of his father, the Reverend Patrick of Rathobyres, from the College of Arms of England ; they are quarterly, or and argent, a fess wreathed azure and gules, in the first and fourth quarters a camel's head couped sable bridled of the fourth, in the second quarter a crescent, and in the third a cinquefoil, both of the last. The crest is a demi-negro holding a bill and a sugar cane, &c., certainly not an improvement on the
—
simple old bearing. William, merchant in Edinburgh, acquired Cammo, near Cramond, in 1637 his son had a daughter and heir, Rachel, who married John ;
30
2
WORKMAN'S
38
Menzies, advocate, of Culterallers,
co.
MS.
Lanark, by
whom Cammo was
sold
in 1710.
A
branch of the Rathobyres family
settled, in the
seventeenth cen-
Dalmeny, and is now represented by Archibald Wilkie of Ormiston and Bonington, co. Edinburgh, who married Grace, daughter of George Napier of Dales, in West Lothian, and has issue his grandmother, Janet Liston, was cousin of the Right Hon. tury, at Echlin, in the parish of
;
Sir Robert Liston, G.C.B., Ambassador at Constantinople. 1540, John attended as and in Wilkie 1542 William held the parliament judicator same office. The burgh of Lanark was represented by William Wilkie 1581-93, and by William 1681 ; John sat in parliament for Haddington ;
1587,
and Gabriel
for Selkirk in 1594.
Mr
Archibald of Halrawmure, co. Peebles, was nephew and one of the heirs of Andrew, Earl of Teviot, and Lord Rutherford, who died in 1664.
William, burgess of Lanark, was father of Mr Robert, one of the ministers of Glasgow, Rector and Vice-Chancellor of the University there, and a member of the High Court of Commission 1634 his sons acquired Haghill, Camlachie, and Broomhouse ; James, son of Mr John of Broom;
house, acquired Foulden, co. Berwick, which has descended to the present John Wilkie of Foulden.
Foulden had previously belonged to another branch of the family, of whom was Sir John, knighted 1648, who married Agnes, daughter of James Lord Carmichael, by Agnes Wilkie, and had a daughter and heir, Agnes, who married in 1676 William Lord Ross, and had issue. Arms cut on a stone at Stonebyres, co. Lanark, with the initials V. V., and date 1589 a fess wreathed between two stars of six points in chief and a
—
crescent in base.
The Foulden Wilkies have
intermarried with
M'Morran of Glospen,
Galbraith of the Kilcroich family, Arnot of Granton (an heiress), Dalyell of Binns, Bruce of Arnot, &c. 121. *Steill. Sir James Balfour's blazon is azure, three furisons (the steel used for striking fire from a flint) or. In 1259 Henry Stel was on an inquest at Peebles; Alexander Stel
—
was a prisoner in England 1346; William Stele was dempster of parliament 1545 George represented the burgh of Brechin 1 646-8-61 the ;
;
name
occurs in the chartulary of Brechin from 1434 onwards. Arms registered, 1866, by Gavin Steel of Carfin, co. Lanark or, three crest a dexter-arm grasping a broadsword proper ; furisons azure " motto Steel to the back." He descends from a brother of Mr William, minister of Dalserf, who inherited Waygateshaw in 1722, on the death of his maternal uncle, William Weir, and d.s.p. 1760.
—
;
—
—
*Bell. The detached seals in H.M. Record Office of Adam and Alan Bel bear respectively a wheel ornament and a duck Robert Bell,
—
— — 1427 a chevron between three mullets; Robert, 1430 three — 1434 a chevron between three birds Adam, 1555— three
;
botle 1455.
Adam,
bells.
;
Bernard was Abbot of Melrose 1490.
bells;
Andrew was
prior of
New-
WORKMAN'S
MS.
239
of Bernard, monk of Melrose, has two bells in chief and a stag's head erased in base. Sir James Balfour and Porteus have azure, three bells or, for Bell of Kirkonnel or Knockinwall. Balfour has another blazon for the name All the entries in the Lyon sable, a chevron between three bells argent. Register have Bells the earliest is James of Provesthaugh, 1672-78
The
seal, 15 lo,
— —
;
azure, a fess between three bells or. The Bells are on the list of unruly clans in the
and
Bell's
Tower
mentioned
is
in the acts of
West Marches
1587,
parliament 1481.
William represented Stirling in parliament 1545-6, and James sat for Sir John Bell of Hamilton's Farm was Provost of Glasgow 1596. Glasgow, and its representative in parliament, in the reign of Charles II. Ferra. Azure, an anchor argent, cross-bar or. *KiLTRA or KiLCRA. Portcus has another blazon azure, a star or between three crescents argent.
—
*Makell. The name is Maben in some MSS. TuLLO. Argent, on a fess gules between three cross azure as
many mullets or. *DuMBRECK OF THAT
122.
have — argent, a dagger azure
Sir Jamcs Balfour and Porteus hilted gules, thrust downwards through a
wolf passant sable. An old Aberdeenshire family of the
crosslets fitchde
Ilk.
in
;
1348 Philip de Dunbrek was deputy
sheriff.
Meldrum, Sir William, of that
Ilk.
Drawn
in ink
and
partly coloured —a demi-otter crowned with an antique crown issuing from waves — unicorn's head; motto— "Love causid supporters— proper; "
crest
a horse and a
^a
;
griffin.
*Blackwood.
123.
Spittell.
Argent, an eagle displayed sable between three crescents
gules.
*RoBERTON. This surname is frequently confused with Robertson, and the arms of the one family assigned to the other.
The
coat here reproduced
is certainly the genuine bearing. recorded for Archibald of Bedlay 1672-78, with different tincfirst and fourth, gules, a close helmet tures, and a crescent for difference argent second and third, argent, a cross crosslet fitchde sable. Porteus
It is
;
;
makes
the cross gules.
In 1730 George Robton or Roberton obtained from the Lord Lyon a certificate of his descent and arms, when the cross was made gules. Roberton, co. Lanark, was founded before the middle of the twelfth century by Robert, brother of Lambin, and a family, who may have been Robert jde Robardiston, c. his descendants, took their surname from it. Robert, 1228-37; Steuene de Roberton of Lanarkshire swore 1185 ;
Edward
and Roberton was granted by Robert I. to John de Monfode great part of the lands and the barony belonged to Logan, Cresswell, Ramsay, and finally to the Douglases of Dalkeith, who long fealty to
:
held them.
I.
;
WORKMAN'S
240
MS,
original family, however, remained seated at Earnock, which they held till far on in the eighteenth century ; see Appendix to Nisbet's "
The
Heraldry." John de Robertoun of Ernoksabufoy, John de Robardston, 1365 1390; Stephen of Roberton, 1408; John of Robertoun, 1474, still has the " of that Ilk," designation Captain John Roberton, last of Earnock, d.s.p. 1786, when the estate was sold his brother William had, with others who died unmarried I. Archibald, Captain R.A., married Jane, daughter of Admiral Sir ;
—
;
William Parker of Harburn, baronet, and left one surviving daughter, Mary, resident at Dawlish 2. Peter Taylor, Lieut-Colonel Eighth Regiment ;
of Foot, married Mary Parker, sister of his brother's wife ; their son, Peter Archibald Roberton, Lieut.-Colonel late Bengal Army, now represents the family as heir male. James, son of a younger son of Earnock, of was Justice-Depute Scotland, and on the restoration was elevated to the bench with the title of Lord Bedlay his descendants were seated at ;
his granddaughter, Janet Lanark, for three generations Bedlay, Roberton, Countess of Kincardine, died in 1772. Three younger sons of Roberton of Earnock went abroad about 1630. Matthew, who had a certificate of the gentility of his birth from the co.
;
Marquess of Hamilton, was grandfather of John Robton or Robeton, his son John was successively councillor of the parliament of Paris secretary to William, Prince of Orange (William HL), and to the Elector of Hanover (George L), was naturalized in England 1693, and left a son who, in 1730, as already stated, entered his pedigree and arms in Scot-' land. One of this branch was long Lady of the Bedchamber to the Princess Amelia, and died in 1762. The other emigrants went to Sweden, where they prospered and left descendants, who were ennobled as Robsalm and of Robson they bore the helmet with the addition of a large plume of feathers, and for crest, an anchor, the same as the Robertons in Scotland. The arms of the Earnock family have not been registered, but on an old family seal in the possession of Colonel Roberton, they are first and second and third, a cross crosslet fitchde crest an fourth, a helmet "For security;" supporters two savages wreathed anchor; motto about the head and middle with leaves. *Lawson. Seal of Mr Robert 1509 a saltire, and on a chief a horse's head bridled between two garbs. Seal of James 1586, son of Mr James, minister of St Giles', Edinburgh two crescents and a mullet. See F. The bearings and tinctures of the arms vary greatly. Sir J. Balfour Porteus has as W. Lawson of Humbie azure, gives as W, and F. two crescents argent, a star in chief or in base Lawson of Boghall or, a saltire and chief azure, the chief charged with two garbs of the field. Another authority has argent, a saltire sable, on a chief of the second two garbs or. No arms are registered except a recent grant to the Right Hon. Sir ;
;
—
—
— ;
—
;
—
—
—
;
—
—
WORKMAN'S
MS.
241
Charles of Halheriot, Lord Provost of Edinburgh. Sir William Lawson of Boghall, in West Lothian, and Cairnmuir, co. Peebles, d.s.p. May 1628, and was succeeded by his brother John their grandfather, Mr Richard, Justice-Clerk, had acquired Cairnmuir, and other lands, 1491-1508, and his seal, in 1507, described by Nisbet, was a saltire and a chief charged with three garbs, which certainly affords no evidence in favour of the theory that he was a younger son of Humbie. ;
Cairnmuir descended
Canada 1837
;
William Lawson, who sold
to
his brother James,
now
in
New
it
and died
in
Zealand, represents the
family.
Richard, above named, sat member of the Secret Council.
in parliament
1481-1505, and was
a
James Lawson was Provost of Edinburgh 1534, Senator of the College of Justice 1532, and sat in parliament. •Hunter. *Stenhop. a surname probably assumed from Stanhope in Tweedbut
does not appear that those lands ever were possessed by persons of the name. Thomas of Stanehope was resident in that neighbourhood 147 1. family of Stenhope possessed Stenhope's Mylne, near Edinburgh, at the commencement of the seventeenth century. John of dale,
it
A
in that quarter 1479-88-93.
Stanehope appears 124.
*Clarke.
Hallamot (?).
Argent, a bend gules, in sinister chief a flower like a impaling, vert, an eagle displayed with two tulip slipped and leaved heads gules dimidiated, crowned with an antique crown argent. L. arms registered, 1672-78, by Ludovick Cant of 125. Cant. Dryburnefoord argent, a bend engrailed between a crescent and a star of eight rays in chief and a mullet in base sable. ;
—
;
of Edinburgh, sat in parliament 1473-93. L. Sorbe. argent, three (? goats') heads erased
Henry Cant, burgess
Ahannay of
sable, collared argent,
;
campaned
—
Sir James Balfour has some of the couped sable ;
or,
azure.
a
saltire
MSS. makes
between four martens' heads the charges three roebucks'
heads.
The only
registration is in 1784, by Sir Samuel Hannay of Mochrum and Kirkdale, baronet, heir male of the Sorbie family argent, three bucks' heads couped azure, collared or, with bells thereto pendant gules ;
—
—
he was allowed supporters two roebucks proper. Gilbert de Hannethe, co. Wigton, signed the Ragman Roll. Sorbie was the seat of the family till the middle of the seventeenth century. Sir Robert of Mochrum was created a baronet 1630, with remainder his heirs male whomsoever. Mr Patrick was cterk of the Privy to Council in Ireland. The Funeral Entry in Ulster's Registers for Lady
Hannay, who was buried at Christ Church, Dublin, 27th March 1662, gives the arms first and fourth, argent, three (? goats') heads erased azure horned or second and third, argent, three cross crosslets fitchde issuing from as many crescents sable.
— ;
3P
WORKMAN'S
242
A similar "
crosslet
MS.
and crescent form the
Per ardua ad altar
He was,
crest of Sir
Samuel, with and
in 1783, served heir male,
the motto, assumed the long dormant title. His son, Sir Samuel, d.s.p. 1841, and there are now two claimants to the honour. Kirkdale, acquired in 1532, is the seat of Sir Samuel's heir of line. Dryesdaill. That name is scored out and Boyss written below in
Argent, a saltire and chief azure. Arms of Thomas died in 1636, the same, with the addition of Drysdaill, Islay Herald, who in the cantons motto " Constancie with disfour crosses moline gules
a different hand.
—
;
cretion."
*Watsoun.
Seal of James Watsoun, Archdeacon of Teviotdale, stag's head cabossed. Sir James Balfour gives argent, an oak-tree proper, on a fess Porteus makes the fess or charged with three stars azure a star argent.
— 1415 a
—
gules. in 1494 Walter, John Watson held lands in Edinburgh 1392 his and of Dumbarton, spouse, were landowners Eupheme Logan burgess there a long succession of bailies, provosts, burgh-clerks of Dumbarton descended from them, and two of the name sat in parliament for the burgh in the reign of Charles H. Arms registered, 1672-78, by David of Craslatt, Provost of Dumbarton ^argent, an oak-tree eradicated proper, surmounted of a fess sable. John sat in parliament for Selkirk 1587, and David for St Andrews 1593-98 James, Provost of St Andrews, acquired Pitcruvie, and died in his descendants were of Aitherny, Denbrae, and Glentarkie. 1657 Alexander of Glentarkie registered arms 1672-78 the tree growing out of a mount in base proper, surmounted of a fess wavy azure, charged with ;
;
—
;
—
;
a
sail
argent. chief family of the name was of Saughton, near Edinburgh, which was the property of Richard Watson in 1537 Mr David of Saugh-
The
—
;
ton, writer to the signet, registered arms 1673 argent, an oak-tree growing out of a mount in base proper, surmounted of a fess azure in 18 18 sup;
two
griffins proper gorged with ducal coronets or, were allowed porters, The family ended in an heiress, to his descendant, James of Saughton. Earl of first wife of Sholto Morton. Helen, John, Robert H., in the thirteenth year of his reign, regranted to William Watson his lands of Cranstonriddel, and failing heirs male of his body to Alexander de Moravia, &c. Robert HI., early in his reign, confirmed to William Mautalent, son and heir of Thomas Mautalent of Halsington, and Elizabeth his
daughter of William called Watson, the lands of Shillinglaw, Traquair, and Innerleithen, settled on them by Thomas on their marriage. In 1407, William Watson of Cranston, having purchased Traquair and Shillinglaw from the Maitlands above named, had a Crown charter in 1409 the Maitlands granted annual-rents from the lands of Griestoun, &€., in Peeblesshire, to Marion de Craigie and William Watson her son the same year there is another Crown charter of Traquair and Shilling-
wife,
;
;
WORKMAN'S
MS,
243
law to William, son of William Watson of Cranston, and Janet his wife, daughter of John of Caverhill failing heirs of their bodies, to Alexander, son of the late John de Moravia of Blackbarony, and others. ;
The Murrays
afterwards came into possession in 1489-90 David Boswell, son and heir of Marion Watson, having died without heirs, the Crown granted his lands of Griestoun to John, son of Patrick Murray of Falahill, but John Auchinleck seems to have obtained possession as nearest heir of Marion Watson. *Ryind. Seal of Alexander Rind 151 2 ermine, a cross engrailed, in sinister chief a mullet. The coat here reproduced is cut on a stone at Wright's Houses, near Edinburgh, with the date 1450, for I. Rynd, wife of Alan Napier. ;
—
The Rynds were an opulent burgess
family in Edinburgh, intermarried with the Otterburns, Cants, Levingtons, &c., and produced several magistrates, donors to the Church of St Giles', &c. " " of Mekeledaill is added. See C. ; here the charge in LiTTiLL, chief is a mullet, and it is so on the seal of Elizabeth, wife of Alexander Napier, 1566, and in Sir James Balfour's blazon. Porteus has for Little of Mekildale sable, a saltire (engrailed ?)
— argent. Stacie has the following valuable entry: — "Litle of Meikledale of David being now chiefe 1670, servant to King Charles the Second — —a demia England, bears the former coat argent old,
Litle
in
sable,
saltire
;
crest
lyon issuing furth of a wreath of his collours Sa., powldered with saltier crosses as the other armed G., in his dexter paw a cutless proper, and in his sinister a saltier cross Ar.
;
motto
— Concedo nulli '
;'
1670, extract."
Along
with the other entry of the old arms he gives the motto, '' Fidei coticula crux" adding, " sent to London i6']2" David was son of Thomas Little, who was son of Simon of Meikledale. In 1673 William of Over Liberton, near Edinburgh, registered crest ^a sable, a St Andrew's cross argent, a crescent for difference leopard's head or, evidently allusive to Liberton or Leperton, forrnerly the property of a family taking their surname from the lands, and bear" Magnum in parvo." ing that animal's head on their shield motto An older bearing of the Littles of Liberton has the saltire with three
—
;
—
;
cross crosslets fitch6e in chief.
The
—
crescent
is
gules and placed on the
arms registered 181 1 by Walter James LittleGilmour of Liberton and Craigmiller. His ancestor's arms, cut on the
centre of the saltire in the
monument
—
the Greyfriars' Churchyard, with the date 1667, are a no crest ; motto " Multum in saltire engrailed with no other charge in
;
—
'darvo."
The Littles were one of the unruly clans in the West March 1587. Edward sat in parliament 1526-28, and was depute-marischal. Mr Clement, commissary of Edinburgh, died 1580; his younger brother, William of Over Liberton, was Provost of Edinburgh, and sat in parlia-
ment 1587-92, Huchtred
Litel witnessed a charter of Richard Morvill, Constable of
WORKMAN'S
244
MS.
Scotland and in 1351 Martin Li till witnessed one of William Douglas, Lord of Liddesdale in 1398 Nichol Litil was one of the sureties for the Earl of Douglas, warden of the West Marches. James L, on 30th April 1426, confirmed a grant made by Robert, Duke of Albany, Regent of Scotland, in favour of Simon Lytil, of the ;
;
lands of Senbigil, Mikkildale, Kirktoun, Sourbie, the Malnarlande, and Simon Litill of Kirktoun occurs as a witness the Pullis, Dumfriesshire. in 1469; and in 1585 Simon of Meikledale, and many others of the name, were pardoned for intercommuning with the Earl of Morton,
R. B. Armstrong has given me a valuable notice of a stone in " Thomas Li tie, son to the the Churchyard of Ewes, to the memory of d Laird of Meikldail, ain honest gentleman, wel beloved of al the
Mr
His age sixty-seven." There are country, who dyed in April 27, 1627. also inscriptions referring to his descendants, resident for four generations in Wrea and Terrona, the last date being 1808.
The arms
on the sinister side is a lion sejant conare rudely cut in dexter his tournde, holding paw a broadsword in bend sinister, and in on the dexter side there is a his sinister paw a saltire below the sword ;
;
mullet between two crescents irregularly placed. Mr Armstrong has also kindly placed at my disposal the following memoranda, showing the period at which the estates were sold. Disposition, 24th September 1606, by Thomas Lytill of Meikledaill, of the six and
a half merk lands of Sorbie to William Armstrang and Alexander his son. Charter, 21st June 1615, by Thomas Littell of Meikledaill, in favour of William Armstrang, of the four merk land of Kirktoun.
August 1623, by David Lytill of Ormestonehill, for Thomas Lytill, sometime of Mekilldaill, and Masie Batie his spouse, by which he became bound to subscribe and deliver all charters, precepts of Obligation, i8th
sasines, &c., to secure Robert, Earl of Nithsdale,
pound lands of Mekilldale. This 126. *Denskyne. recorded,
with
alterations,
— Stirling gules, a goshawk
in the twenty-three
coat is given in various
MSS., and was
by James Danskine, merchant in or standing on the back of a hare courant 1766,
argent.
Smyth
(?).
Or, a saltire and in chief a crescent azure.
•MVCHELL.
Newtoun.
"of Dolcoaff" is added. Seal, 1508, of John, son and heir of James Newton of Moffatslands ^a buckle between three roses; in 1520 William Newton of Newton seals with a lion rampant; George, in 1562, has the same with a rose in sinister chief William of 127.
L.
—
;
;
that Ilk, 1570, uses a lion
rampant holding a cross patde between his
paws.
—
Pont and Sir James Balfour give for Newton of that Ilk azure, three boars' heads couped argent and for Dalcoiff— gules, a lion passant or rampant argent, on a chief azure three mullets or roses of the second. The arms registered 1673 by Richard of that Ilk are vert, a lion rampant or, on a chief of the second three roses gules. ;
—
WORKMAN'S Some English
MS.
245
name have borne a
families of the
lion
rampant
charged on the shoulder with a cross patde.
Adam
Newton, Dean of Durham, tutor to Henry, Prince of Wales, and treasurer to H.R.H., had a grant of the Manor of Charlton in Kent, and was created a baronet 1620 he bore azure, two ostrich feathers in saltire between three boars' heads couped argent armed or, as a cadet of
—
;
Newton
of that Ilk.
John de Neuton, c. 1200 James and Hugh de Neuton, of the county of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296; William de Newton had a charter of the barony of Newton, co. Haddington, 4th February, sixth of Robert H., on the resignation of Robert de Swynton and Margaret Archihis wife, in whose right he held it, their liferent being reserved bald sat in parliament 1463 Richard of that Ilk was created a baronet 1697, but d.s.p. about 1726, leaving his estate in liferent to his wife, Helen Livingstone, heiress of Westquarter, and entailed on his kinsman, Richard Hay, who assumed the surname and arms of Newton. The present family of Hay-Newton, his descendants, inherit no Newton blood. ;
;
;
or Dalcove, belonged to Archibald
Dalcoiff,
1481
;
James,
Janet, wife of
who was dead
Adam Ker
in
of Shaw,
Newton
1445, James 1533, leaving a daughter and heir, mother of Thomas Ker of Shaw and
Dalcove.
— —
Stacie gives the following Newton of Dalcorff in England ^gules, a lion rampant argent, on a chief of the second three roses of the first " Virtute crest a boar's head couped argent ; motto barbed vert :
,. ;
cresco."
—
Hamiltoun of Sanquhare.
L.
Dunbar of Connoch. L. Makmakane. L. GoRDONE OF Stradoun. As Lochinvar
in L.
The name
is
written
below in a different hand, and the one that had been above the shield has been obliterated.
Myretoun of yt
L.
Ilk.
*Eliott. See K. There is a note referring to the charge, on " or the bend, perhaps rather between the bendlets, a batton some says it is an flutt instrument betwext two bendeletts wreathed." 128.
;
Murray of ye the
Toneis.
L.
*Arnut. The original coat had three mullets. In all the entries for name in the register the chevron is sable. The surname is taken
from the lands of Arnot in Kinross-shire, which, in 1284, belonged to Michael de Arnoth. David Arnot took the oaths to Edward I. Sir Henry 1395; Walter had a charter of the barony of Arnot 1506; Michael, fiar of Arnot, was created a baronet 1629 his arms, cut in stone at Arnot 1622, impaled with those of his wife, Anne, eldest daughter and coheir of Robert Brown of Balquharn and Finderlie a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis are as ;
;
—
—
here reproduced.
3Q
WORKMAN'S
246
MS.
Arnot of Balbarton ended in two coheiresses, who married Dundas of Fingask and Brown of Fordell. Peter, younger son of Robert Arnot of Woodmill, married early in the sixteenth century Helen Abercromby, heiress of Balcormo, co. Fife Hugo Arnot of Balcormo had a daughter and heir, Christian, who their son, Hugo married, in 1745, Duncan Pollock, merchant in Leith " Arnot of Balcormo, advocate, author of a History of Edinburgh," and other works, was grandfather of the present Hugo Arnot of ;
;
Balcormo. Sir John of Birswick was Treasurer-Depute of Scotland, Provost of Edinburgh, sat in parliament 1586-90, and acquired a great estate. Robert Arnot, younger of Newton, assumed the surname of Balfour on his marriage, 1606, with Margaret, only child of Michael Lord Balfour of Burleigh, and, on the death of his father-in-law, succeeded to that peerage.
*Law.
Pont has
—
a bend between two cocks gules. Porteus says ermine, or argent, a bend gules two cocks proper. The seal of James, Bishop of Orkney 1607, bears a bend sinister between a mullet in chief and a cock in base he was afterwards Arch-
—
or,
;
The arms registered, 1672-78, by his grandson. bishop of Glasgow. Major James of Brunton, are ermine, a bend between two cocks gules
—
—a unicorn's head erased proper
motto
—
;
"
Nee
obseura nee ima.'' Law of in the Nisbet calls principal family of Lawbridge, Galloway, the name, and says they bore argent, a bend and in chief a cock gules " Sat amieo, mikifelix." 2i cock crest crowing motto All I find of them is, that George Law, portioner of Lawisbrig, in
crest
;
—
—
—
;
;
—
Ayrshire, was dead 1638, leaving two daughters his coheirs Janet, d.s.p., and Margaret, mother of George Reid of Auchincloich and Lawisbrig, 1677.
He
goes on to say that he had seen a charter of the year 1398 (?), of Bogness, and other lands in the shire of Elgin, to Robert, second son of Of this family there seems nothing known. Robert of Lawbridge. Nisbet says, Mr James Law of Bogis (? Bogness), Keeper of the Signet in the reign of Charles L, was grandfather of John Law of Netherurd, CO. Peebles, only representer of the Lawbridge family. John was son of James of Netherurd, writer in Edinburgh, and had a brother James, who a sister Marion. d.s.p. 1670, and William In 1646 Law, in Edistoun, had a Crown charter of a third of Bonington, co. Peebles, and died soon after, leaving a son, William, Clerk of the Treasury and Exchequer. The surname is probably taken from one of the ten or more places in Scotland called Law, one of them being in Ayrshire; in 1428 Robert de Lawe had a safe-conduct to pass through England on his return from Spain; 1476, Andrew in Galloway; 1513, William on a jury at Dumfries; 1478,
burgh
John held lands ;
in
Edinburgh; 1494, Alexander, burgess of Edin-
1496-9, Alexander, falconer to the King.
In Fife, John in Dunbulg 1494; David and John in Dysart 1491,
WORKMAN'S
MS.
247
and a family long resident there there was also a burgess family of good standing at Kirkcaldy, which was represented in parliament by James ;
Law
1644-52.
Law
of Lithrie, Fife, had a Crown charter 1542 Thomas had a charter of confirmation of Nether Stenton, c. 1570, from the Commendator of Dunfermline. To the same family probably belonged John Law, in Spittal, some-
George
;
times designed portioner of Lathrisk, who, with his wife, Margaret Strang, had a sasine 1575 their son, James, was Bishop of Orkney 1605, Archbishop of Glasgow 16 15, and died in 1632 he acquired Brunton, in Fife, in which he was succeeded by his eldest son, James of Brunton, father of George of Brunton, who left a son, James of Brunton, who d.s.p. 1668, and a daughter, Agnes, married, 1660, John Lundin of Auchtermairnie, and is represented by Richard Lundin-Brown, Esq., paternally descended from the Browns of Fordell and Finmount, heirgeneral of Archbishop Law. Major James Law succeeded his nephew 1668, and was grandfather of James of Brunton, living 1725. Walter, younger brother of Major Law, was of Easter Kinevie and ;
;
Condland, and registered arms 1672-78.
Mr Thomas
Law, minister of Inchinnan, second son of the Archbishop, married Jean, daughter of Sir Robert Hamilton of Silvertonhill, and had, with other issue, Mr James of Ballornock, d.s.p. Mr Robert of " Ballornock, author of the Memorials," father of Mr John of Ballornock, 1690; Mr John, one of the ministers of Edinburgh, Almoner to Queen Anne 1708, whose son, William, Professor of Moral Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh, acquired the estate of Livingstone, in East Lothian, which was sold by his great-grandson, William Law, who d.s.p. James Law, Writer to the Signet, younger brother of the last named, left a son, who is probably now heir male of the Archbishop. Francis Law or Lauw, a naval officer in the Swedish service, was ennobled, in 1680, for bravery in a fight with the Danes in Calmar Sound, and had a ship in flames added to his arms as an augmentation. ;
,
From
a family of
"
statesmen
"
at
Askham,
in
Westmoreland,
Edmund Law,
Bishop of Carlisle 1768, father of Edward Lord Ellenborough, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench ; this family have no arms registered, but bear ermine, on a bend engrailed between two cocks gules three mullets pierced or. The Bishop used argent, on a bend between two cocks gules three mullets of the field.
descended
—
—
Of the Laws of Newton, co. Banff, said in the Lyon Register to be of the same family as Archbishop Law, was William of Newton, who had Mr William of Newton, d.s.p. Marissue, Thomas of Newton, d.s.p. Jean, died unmarried garet, married William Anderson of Newton ;
;
;
;
Robert Stewart of Towiemore. The descent of John Law, the financier, has been a subject of much discussion his father, William, a goldsmith in Edinburgh, bought Lauriston, in the parish of Cramond, 1683, married Jean Campbell, and
Isobel, married
;
WORKMAN'S
248
MS.
had a large family, born between 1666 and 1682; in a pedigree issued in 1760 to John Law of Lauriston, then in India, known in France as the Baron de Lauriston, William the goldsmith is said to be younger son Dr of Major James of Brunton, which is impossible from the dates. "
Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae," calls the goldsmith son of Mr John Law, minister of Neilston, nephew of the Archbishop, which may be the case. Mr Riddell mentions that there were other goldsmiths of the name in Edinburgh before William. Scott, in his
John Law was naturalised in France 17 16, was Comptroller-General of Finances, bought the office of Secretaire du Roi, and died in 1729, leaving, by Katherine, daughter of Nicholas Knollys, titular Earl of Banbury, a son and daughter, who were not recognised as legitimate, and both d.s.p. His brother, William of Lauriston, Director-General of the French East India Co., was father of John, who entered his incorrect pedigree, was knight of St Louis, Mardchal de Camp, and Governor of Pondicherry his son, Francis John William of Lauriston, died unmarried 1822, when the estate was sold. Jacques Alexander, elder brother of Francis, was Comte de Lauriston, peer of France 1815, Marquis 181 7, Marshal 1823, Knight of the Holy Ghost, Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour, Ambassador at St his great-grandson is now Marquis de Lauriston. Petersburgh, &c. Arms ermine, a bend invecked between two cocks gules. L. the boars' heads are argent. 129. TuRYNE. ;
—
;
;
"
See the
Genealogist," III., p. 65, for a notice of the claim of the Turings, of the family of Foveran, to a baronetcy also The Lay of the ;
Turings.
Crawfurd of Drongane. Hannay (?). Argent three
—
L. stags' heads
couped azure.
The name
is obliterated.
most of the MSS. make the
armed or. Henry de Hoga held lands in Berwickshire c. 1250; Salomon del Hoga left a daughter and heir, Emma, mother of John de Grantham, who made a grant from his lands at Berwick to the monks of Kelso c. 1 270
Hog.
L.
;
boars' heads
;
Adam, son of Henry de Hoga, c. 1280. In 1296 Henry Hogge, of the county of Roxburgh, and John Hog, burgess of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. Robert, burgess of Edinburgh 1332; Roger, burgess of Edinburgh 1359-64, was a conspicuous person, and acted as deputy-accountant 1360; he had several charters of lands, tenements, and annual-rents in Edinburgh and Haddington in the reign of David II., married Margaret Hog, who married, secondly, John de Peblys, and left a son, John Hog, living 1373. 1379, November 12, the castle of Berwick was taken by Hog, Lydzet;
wod, and their companions. 1406, James Hog, scutifer ; 1425, Gilbert, armiger ; and 1444, James of Halyden, armiger, all connected with Roxburghshire. William of Vigourshaugh, co. Roxburgh, was a vassal of the Earl
Marischal for lands in Upper Keith before 1480; he
is
probably identical
WORKMAN'S
MS.
249
with William Hog, son of Margaret Turnbull, Lady Hop Pringle, who has a suit in 1490; about the same time lived Christian, wife of John Craig of that Ilk, and John, Abbot of Culross 1490, who settled lands on Isobel Hog, and her husband, Alexander Hamilton of Grange, and was dead in 1494. The Hogs of Vigourshaugh, latterly styled of Doucott, continued closely connected with the Marischal family, and Monan Hog acted as Marischal-Depute in 1568; John, last of Vigourshaugh, was dead in 1647,
when
his sister, Elizabeth,
had inherited that
place, Doucott,
and
Braidyards.
A son
of the family is said to have had a grant of Bleridryne, in the Mearns, from the Earl Marischal, in the reign of James V. Monan of Bleridryne married, before 1584, Katherine Carnegie, niece of Sir John Carnegie of Kinnaird James of Bleridryne registered arms 1693 ^argent, ;
—
;
three boars' heads erased azure
armed and langued or
distilling drops of
blood gules.
Of
this family
were the Hogs
who
possessed Raemoir for several
generations, 1690- 1800.
Mr William Hog, minister of Ayton 1 601-16, was father of Mr William of Bogend, advocate 1641, whose eldest son, Roger of Harcarse and Bogend, advocate, registered arms 1672 argent, three boars' heads erased azure armed or; represented Berwickshire in parliament, was Senator of the College of Justice 1677, was knighted, had his lands united and erected into a barony 1681, and died in 1700; his son, William of Harcarse, was father of Andrew of Harcarse, who died in 1772. Captain William Hog, merchant in Edinburgh, brother of Lord Harcarse, was father of John of Cammo and Ladykirk, who registered arms 1736, with a crescent for difference; his elder son, John, sold the
—
married Barbara, daughter of Sir Christopher Musgrave, Bart, and died in 1744, leaving four daughters in 1783 his brother, Roger of Newliston, registered arms without difference, and was allowed supporters, two boars proper. John Hog was appointed Bute Pursuivant 1675, and died 1704. Pettigrew. L. In 1296 Thomas Petikreu of Lanarkshire swore fealty to Edward I., and there were small landowners of the name in that estates,
;
county long
after.
Bannatyne of Corhouse. L. much obliterated. Seal of Martin Watt, Chancellor of Glasgow 130. *Watt. ;
1496,
three roses on a bend.
John Watt represented Edinburgh in parliament 1596. Adam, writer to the signet, was father of Mr John of Rosehill, co. Edinburgh, 1661, whose son, Adam of Rosehill, 1692-1722, was Town Clerk of Edinburgh. to
Hugh Watt
Crown
charter of Fulshiels, in and his son, Mr Robert.
Arms
West
Lothian, 1667,
registered, 1672-78, 'by James Pearson of Kippenross, with the field argent, daggers azure, heart proper, cinquefoil " Rather die than disloyal." these sable ; crest a tower proper ; motto
*Peirsone.
—
—
3R
2
WORKMAN'S
50
MS.
arms are cut on a stone at Dunblane of an earlier date. At the same time James of Balmadies, Forfarshire, registered a similar coat, but the sword points are upward, the heart in chief, and the cinquefoil, which is azure, These arms are cut on a tombstone at Arbroath, with the is in base. date 1589. The coat registered for Pierson of Westhall, is as the last, with the addition of two crescents azure in chief, and the cinquefoil is also of that tincture.
David Perisone, merchant, had
Thomas
an
English safe-conduct 1369; 1450; 1506 the Abbot of Arbroath Thomas Peirson, and the family have ever
held lands at Blackness
in
c.
granted lands to his servitor, since been landowners in Forfarshire. John was a monk of Arbroath 1544, and David represented the burgh in parliament 1579. Alexander was of Balmadies 1614, and a charter of the barony, in favour of himself and his wife, Isobel Beaton, is dated 1624; their descendants intermarried with Pierson of Westhall, Murray of Lintrose, Lindsay of Evelick, Fraser of Kirkton, Trompowsky of Livonia, and the late representative, James Alexander Ochterlony of the Guynd Pierson, succeeded to the estates and representation of the Ochterlony family, on the death of his maternal uncle, in 1843, and d.s.p. 1873. Archibald of Westhall left three daughters, coheirs, 17 14. The ;
Perth, which had belonged to his ancestors early in the seventeenth century, was sold in 1778, by William Pearson; he married, in 1775, Jane, daughter of Sir James Campbell of Aberuchill, To a family of wealthy burgesses of baronet, and left descendants.
barony of Kippenross,
co.
Edinburgh belonged Alexander of South Hall, a Senator of the College of Justice 1650-56, who left issue Leys and Burnett of Kemnay.
this line intermarried with Burnett of
;
Thomas
Pierson had a charter of Lochlands, co. Forfar, 1599, and founded a family seated there for nearly two centuries. *Christison. Seal, c. 1480, of Thomas Cristison, Aberlady ^an arm holding a heart paleways. The arms of Sir Robert Christison, baronet or, a chevron sable between three laurel leaves proper are allusive to his eminence as a toxiThe surname means, of course, the son of Christian or Chriscologist. in 1360 an annuity of topher, and here are two instances of its origin four merks was granted yohanni filio Cristiani janitori castri de Strieuehe is also called Kytysoun in 1473 a remission was granted to lyne, John Kennedy Cristisone, and he is subsequently mentioned simply as
—
—
—
:
—
;
John Cristisone. In 1414, William
Cristison, sergeant of Malles, and Michael Cristison, sasine are witnesses to a granted by Sir Robert Logan of Restalrig, to
the Abbot of Scone at Malles, in Perthshire. The name was common in the shires of Aberdeen, Kincardine, and Richard was Canon of Forfar, and was borne by many churchmen.
John, Provincial of the Carmelites in Scotland in the reign of James V. ; John, sub-prior of Elgin about the same time ;
Abernethy 1471
;
WORKMAN'S
MS,
251
William, minister of Dundee 156097, was a leading Reformer, member of the first, and of thirty-eight subsequent General Assemblies of the Church of Scotland, and Moderator 1569. In Perth there was a burgess family of long standing, and John was Provost and Sheriff 1535-42. Christisons were landowners at Cornton, co. Stirling, West Condland,
and Ardgilzean, in Perthshire. Margaret White, wife of James Guthrie of that Ilk, 1763, was heiress of her mother, Margaret Christison, whose mother was one of the two coheiresses of John Malcolm of Foxton, and Jean Oliphant, his wife. L. gules, a cross engrailed between four roses. 131. Aytoun. CO. Fife,
;
Nisbet describes a seal of (Andrew
of Dunmure, co. Fife, Captain ?) in of of Stirling Castle the reign James V. quarterly, first and fourth, a chevron between two stars in chief and a crescent in base; second, Aytoun;
The surname
—
taken from Ayton, co. Berwick, and the early seals of persons of the name bear an eagle displayed, an eightleaved flower, a fleur-de-lis, and in 1327 a man's head affrontde. In 1276 Alicia, wife of Patrick, formerly wife of Robert, son of Maurice de Ayton, seals with a crescent between two mullets, which may account for the quartering used in the sixteenth century. Dunmure was afterwards called Ayton, and on the failure of the direct line the male representation passed to the branch seated at Inchthird,
an anchor.
is
dairnie, co. Fife.
In 1667, Sir John Aytoun of Kippo, Gentleman Usher to His Majesty and Knight of the Black Rod, had a charter of the lands and barony of " bearing the sirname Kippo, in Fife, to himself and his heirs of entail, and armes of Aytoun, with the addition of the black rod ;" his arms are registered with a black baton, ensigned on the top with a lion passant gardant or placed upon the cross, being an addition granted by
Charles
II.
DuDiNGSTOUN OF YT upon the
Ilk.
As Haldinstoune
cross.
in L.,
with a mullet
—argent, a
Arms
of Adinston of that Ilk in the Lyon Register engrailed sable between four cross crosslets fitch^e gules.
*Sandarsoun. Meldrum of yt
cross
Argent, a demi-otter sable crowned with an antique crown or, in sinister flank a mullet gules. Williamson. Thomas Williamson, an archer in the Scots Guard Ilk.
France 1495, acquired property there, and married, in 1506, Marguerite, daughter and heir of Guillaume Rault or Raoult, seigneur of his descendants flourished in the country of their Mesnil Hermey adoption, and Guillaume Comte d'Oilliamson desired to be presented at He then had recourse to Court, but failed to make the necessary proofs. in
;
who
him with a pedigree, making Thomas settle in France in 1410, which does not seem to have been satisfactory, as a second was issued in 1774; and in December of the " the honours of the Court." following year the Count attained his desire, His pedigree traces Thomas the archer from Duncan Williamson the Scottish Heralds,
first
furnished
WORKMAN'S
252
MS.
who, in 1 38 1, married Alice Mackenzie of Kintail, and the other alliances are Farquhar, Graham, and des Essarts. The family exists, and the Comte d'Oilliamson lately married a Mademoiselle de Macmahon, grand-niece of the President of the Republic. The arms do not at all resemble the Scottish bearings, being azure, an eagle displayed with two heads argent, beaked and membered or, standing " Venture and win." on a barrel also or, hooped argent motto In 1317 John Williamson held land in Peebles; in 1343 Adam, son
—
;
of William, renders the accounts of the burgh of Peebles, and in 1365 John, son of William, was a bailie there. Between 1620 and 1680 the burgh was frequently represented in parliament by members of the family of Williamson James, Provost of Peebles, signed the covenant 1638 he acquired lands still possessed by his heirs, and in 1685 James of Hutcheonfield purchased Cardrona, from which the family take their ;
—
Arms
designation. saltire
;
between
^argent, a registered, 1672-78, by James, last named three mullets in chief and flank sable, and a boar's head
erased in base gules.
—
Laing gives a seal, 1610, of Mr Robert of Murieston a thistle and stalked leaved, impaling a saltire between two mullets in flank and as many boars' heads in chief and base in 1599 this gentleman, who was a writer in Edinburgh, acquired from Lord Torphichen the half of the Temple-lands, except Torphichen and other parts retained by his lordship in 1604 Williamson became proprietor of the other half, and had a
Mr
;
;
Crown
charter erecting these properties into the tenandry of the
Temple-
lands.
The
was borne by the old Lords of St John, and must have been taken by Williamson as in a manner representing them. A later seal of the same person has a mullet in chief in place of a boar's head he sold all the Temple property, and d.s.p. Seal of John Williamson, Provost of Seton 1536 2l fess, and in thistle
;
—
chief a mullet.
Leonard 1586; John
sat in parliament for St Andrews 1568 ; Thomas for Cupar for Stirling 1600-17; ^'^d John for Kirkcaldy 1630, and
later.
" The "Herald and Genealogist
contains a notice, by the writer, of Mr David Williamson, minister of St Cuthbert's, his wives, and descendants. Denistoun (?). Duntreathe is added, and there is in the MSS. a
constant confusion between Edmonstone and Dennistoun. Argent, on a bend azure three annulets gemmed or, in sinister chief a unicorn's head erased sable.
Sir Richard Cockburn of Clarkintoun. Arms added and unfinished argent, a crescent azure between three cocks gules crest a lion's head erased crowned with an antique crown supporters a swan and a lion gardant gules collared. Stacie calls the dexter supporter a stork or heron proper, and gives the motto, " Peradventure." There is an official entry of the funeral of Richard of Clarkintoun, who was buried at Haddington 23rd October 132.
—
—
;
;
—
WORKMAN'S
MS.
253
—
—
" 1627; the crest an otter's head proper; motto Vigili aucta ;'' sup" "a and an otter. foule lyke unto a cran porters Seal of Mr Alexander Forest, rector of Logy, and 134. *FoRREST. provost of Foulis 1555 a saltire couped between four roses. Arms granted 1838 to Sir James Forrest of Comiston, baronet, Lord Provost of the city of Edinburgh argent, three oak trees issuing out of the ground vert, on a chief gules as many ears of rye slipped and barbed or (to indicate maternal descent from the family of Riddell), all within a bordure ermine. Comiston was acquired by his ancestor in 1715 Catherine, daughter and heir of James of Comiston, married, 1776, James Forrest, Writer to the Signet, no relative. Finlay of Forest 1380; in 147 1 a person of the name sat in parliament for the burgh of Linlithgow, and it was represented by Henry Forest
—
—
—
;
1540-45; John was provost, and sat in parliament 1583-85. The estate of Pardovan, co. Linlithgow, belonged to the Forests, and in 1502, Margaret, daughter of Thomas, burgess of Linlithgow, married John Cornwall of Bonhard, who was killed at Flodden. David was general of the Cunzie House 1565-67. Mr Alexander, minister of Hassindean 161 3, acquired the lands of Huntlaw in that parish, which were the property of his descendants for five generations.
Gammelshiels,
in
East Lothian, belonged to persons of the name in
the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and Archerfield in the seventeenth. George, burgess of Haddington, was owner of Gimmersmilnes early in
the seventeenth century; his descendant, George Forrest, M.D., Professor of Physiology in the University of St Andrews, d.s.p. 1795, and was
succeeded by his nephew, Alexander Maitland of Gimmersmilnes. Thomas of Forest was comptroller of the Royal Household before 1491.
Akinhead.
These arms, without the leaf, were registered, 1672-78, by James Aikenhead, advocate, one of the commissaries of Edinburgh, representer of the family of Aikenhead of that Ilk; but there is added, " Nota. He is found not to be the Representer." Gilbert del Akenheued, of the county of Lanark, swore fealty to Edward L 1373, Conual de Akinhead witnessed a charter of Walter de Fosselane, Lord of Lennox 1376, William was bailie of Ruglen, and two years later Finlay held the same office at Linlithgow; John, dean of Lennox 1473; in 1489 Stephen, William, and Andrew Akynhed, and others, had a remission for holding Dumbarton Castle against the King 1492, John of Aikenhead and Violet Elphinstone, his wife. Mr William, 1453-94, seems to have been connected with the Lords of St John and persons of his name held lands at Strathbrock. John was burgess of Edinburgh 1572 Thomas, dean of Guild 1576 David was several times provost 1620 to 1637, and sat in parliament in
—
;
;
;
;
;
;
the notices of the family he is designed of that Ilk, but his monument in the Greyfriar's Churchyard gives his name only Nisbet, author of the ;
3s
.
2
WORKMAN'S
54
MS.
"
the Provost's sons another was proHeraldry," was grandson of one of above named. bably James, advocate and commissary Mr Thomas, one of the commissaries of Edinburgh, son of the of David of Byrecleuch, who married Anne, daughter provost, was father of Sir John Hay of Lands, Lord Clerk Register, and left a son, Sir Patrick, commissary clerk, M.P. for Dunfermline; he died in 1698, leavan acorn ing a large family. The arms displayed at his funeral are between three oak leaves. ;
—
MULTRAY
OF YT IlK.
*WiGHOUM OR WiGUM.
John Wighame had a charter of Over
Liberton, from David H. a Early in the fifteenth century there were burgesses, a bailie, and dean of guild of Edinburgh called Bigholme. Armstrong, called Aykman by mistake, but the coat of that family,
which somewhat resembles
given elsewhere. Mr R. B. Armstrong, Junior Carlton Club, London, has given me the following interesting notes on the arms and pedigree of the family, thus very liberally allowing my readers the benefit of his long researches on the borders and among the records. Mr Gilbert Armstrong, a priest, was steward of the household of this, is
David n., and ambassador to England. The changes and variety of the arms are
illustrated
by a separate
plate.
arms appears on a seal attached to a bond of Manrent from John Armstrong (" Gilnockie ") to Robert Lord Maxwell, Warden of the West Marches of Scotland, dated November 2nd, 1525,
The
earliest shield of
Book
of Carlaverock. resided at the Hollows, near the old fort called John Armstrong " Gilnockie's Garden," Canonbie. He had a gift of the lands of Lang-
illustrated in the
holm, Stapilgorton, and many others, from Lord Maxwell. The former he resigned, but he was styled of Stapilgorton. After his execution in John is then 1530, Lord Maxwell obtained a grant of all his lands, &c. mentioned as brother to Thomas of Mangerton. The next shield is that represented on a stone which was formerly built into the Tower of Whithaugh, Liddesdale, when that building was His name is sculptured on the stone, repaired by Lancelot Armstrong. together with one Roman and three Arabic numerals, supposed to represent the date 1559. The stone is still at Whithaugh. According to the Register Lyon Office, the lairds of Whithaugh were descended from Mangerton. They were probably the first cadets of that
house.
The
first
member
of this branch, of
whom we
have
notice, is
year he as registered in 1672 by Francis of Whithaugh, are here given crest, an arm from the shoulder gules " Iwvictus maneo." issuing from the wreath motto
Simon ("Sym the lard"), 1510-1525 was executed. The arms of the family,
to 1535-36, in
—
;
—
which
latter
Armstrong John
LancelotofWuihaugh /SSB
ta2led''(fdfwcA:ip'lS2{;
.'
SiTnon^ of Mancferlon fS8S
Fmitcis of Whii/ntiufh
W2
MunffertoTt 7603 -72
aixf
Man^rlon
rrom Slacies MS c
7674'
Wmiti-m ofSar7y76S8
J^rancis o^Ihnt/iou^ 7622
WORKMAN'S Mr
MS.
255
MS., from which quotations are made farther on, Armstrong occurs as paly of six argent and azure, which is also given by Stacie. The next shield is that here reproduced, which is also given in K. as the arms of Armstrong of Maingertoun but there is no doubt the word Maingertoun is an addition in the same or a co-temporary hand. These arms are those of either Thomas, laird of Mangerton, or his son, ArchiIn K. there is no cloud. bald, who succeeded to the lands. These arms are described in the Harleian MSS., Vol. 2120, p. 138, as those of Armstrong of Maingertone. The same arms were borne by the family which formerly possessed the property of Sorbie in Ewesdale (supposed to be the same as the well-known branch of the Gingles). They appear on a monument in Ewes Churchyard to John Armstrong of Sorbie, who died in 1685. Similar arms occur on a much defaced stone, dated 1733, which, till lately, was to be seen in Canonbie Churchyard, and of which this drawing is a representation. The next shield to be noticed bears the arms of Simon, laird of Mangerton, son or grandson of Archibald, and occurs on a stone still preserved at that place, and on which his initials, with the date 1583, are In
Kerr's
—
;
also sculptured.
as given in Lord Crawford's MS. (from 1603 to 1612), supposing them to be accurate, would be those of Archibald Armstrong of Mangerton, who was denounced rebel and put to the horn in 1610.
The Mangerton arms,
These arms are also given in the Harleian MSS., Vol. 3740, p. 350, and same MSS., Vol. 2120, p. 140. The arms described in Stacie's MS., Lyon Office, for Armstrong of Mangerton, perhaps belong to the period when somewhat similar arms were registered by the laird of Whithaugh, and in this case a change His MS. dates about 1674, at which occurs in the tincture of the field. period there was no Armstrong of Mangerton. Sir James Balfour gives
—argent,
—
three pales azure for Mangerton also for the name gules, three dexter arms vambraced proper and ^argent, an arm holding the trunk of an oak proper.
— ;
;
The Armstrongs who
lived at
Morton Tower (Tower of
Sark), who, " from descended to were Gilnockie," appear to have Satchell, according borne similar arms to those last given. They occur on the remarkable
monumental stone
who
in
Morton Churchyard
to
William Armstrong of Sark,
died in 1658.
Morton Tower was the residence of the celebrated "Kinmont Willie," at one time the head of this branch..
The arms
of Francis, son of John Armstrong of Parknow, were The lands of Parknow may have been those of registered about 1672. Park in Ewesdale, granted by James V., in 1535, to David, son of
—
Herbert Armstrong. Crest an arm issuing from a cloud, the hand hold" Invicta labore" ing a Hercules club proper motto Alexander Armystrand appears as early as 1378, in possession or ;
—
WORKMAN'S
256 occupation
of
Mangerton.
On
the
12th
MS, November
1482,
Thomas
Armystrang resigned the lands of Mangerton into the hands of his Earl of Angus. superior, Archibald, Thomas Armstrong of Mangerton is called "Thomas the Larde" in " the Minority of Mary, as the 1528, and is mentioned during the Wars of " " " Thome the lord in 1548. This gentleman had old laird 1547, and as three brothers, John, Alexander, and George. " Gilnockie," whose arms have been given, is only John called 1530. During the former year his son, John's Christie," being of full age, joined his Christopher, known as father in a Bond of Manrent to Lord Maxwell, and received a grant of " Christie of lands from that nobleman. He was afterwards known as
mentioned
from
1525
to
"
Barnagleis," at one period had charge of Langholm Castle, and was a man of considerable importance in his district. He had three sons, the eldest being John, lived at the Hollows, the Tower his grandfather had The other two being Christopher, " the younger of Barnagleis," built. and Robert. Thomas Armstrong of Mangerton had at least three sons, Archibald, " known during the Wars of the Minority of Mary, as " the young laird
547- 1 548, Thomas, and Simon. Of the date of the death of this laird His son, of Mangerton we have no record. laird in 1569, although he may have first as Archibald, appears succeeded long before that period. He had three sons, Simon, Ninian, and Rowe. The arms already given from the MS. of 1566 or 1567, were those borne by this laird, and probably by his father also. The date of the death of Archibald of Mangerton has not been ascertained, but his eldest son Simon, was proprietor of Mangerton as early as January 1578-79, In after which period there is some difficulty in carrying on the line. " hear 1 we of of and also Rinzane and 1 58 Sym Armstrong Mangertoun, Robe Armstrangis, father brether to the lard of Mangertoun," and we have to decide whether Rinzane and Robe were sons of Thomas, or were the Ninian, and Rowe, sons of Archibald. Of course if we accept the latter we must acknowledge a second Simon, also laird of Mangerton. The laird of Mangerton is mentioned by his Christian 1
name Simon, in 1582-83, 1589, 1590, 1591, and 1597. He was probably the laird who was alive in 1603, and who was so actively engaged during that year in the destructive raids undertaken to prevent the union " the old laird." It has not of the Crowns, and is then occasionally called been satisfactorily ascertained what family Simon of Mangerton had. In 1591-92, immediately following his name, we find that of Sym Armstrong, younger of Rinch or Runchbank, but this would be an unusual way for
We
hear of the eldest son of a laird of Mangerton to be mentioned. " " of Sym Armstrong Mangertoun," and also of Sym, the young laird of Mangertoun," in 1596, but as they are mentioned in an English State
very probably a mistake for Whithaugh, as Sym the young laird of that place, and his father, are both frequently mentioned during the latter part of the sixteenth century.
Paper the
territorial
title
of the latter
is
WORKMAN'S
MS,
257
at the frequent forays during the same period of which we have record, the laird of Mangerton almost always rode alone. certainly hear of a son of the laird of Mangerton, and also the young laird of
Whereas
We
mentioned. On July 23rd, the same year, the young laird was proclaimed an outlaw at Carlisle, but his Christian name is not given, nor do we find his father amongst those outlaws, he being probably either dead or a prisoner. In 1607 we hear of Archibald, brother to Umqle the laird of Mangertoun. And in 1610 there was undoubtedly an Archibald Arm-
Mangerton
in 1603, at
which period the old
laird is also
strong of Mangerton, who in that year was denounced rebel and put to His arms were probably those given in Lord Crawford's MS. the horn.
He was
supposed to have been the
was proprietor of those
lands.
of the surname of Armstrong, who town and estate were at a subsequent
last
The
period granted by Buccleuch, Lord of Liddesdale,
to
one of his natural
sons.
*CUDBERTSOUN. Lord Saltoun, the present representa134. *Fraserof Philorth. " The Erasers tive of this family, printed for private circulation in 1879, of Philorth," 3 vols. 4to, which contains interesting illustrations of the heraldry of the family, and remarks on the variation of the bearings, Philorth was erected into a free barony by Crown charter, 9th February 1455-6, in favour of Alexander Eraser, and his descendants carried two angels or cherubim as supporters before they inherited the peerage of the Abernethys of Saltoun.
Sir Alexander Fraser and his spouse, Johanna Ross, had a charter of Philorth, 1375, from her brother-in-law, Sir Walter de Leslie, Lord of Ross, and the lion rampant is quartered to indicate descent from that
who was daughter and
coheir of William Earl of Ross. The field is gules and the lion argent as recorded, and these are the tinctures of the bearings of the Earls of Ross. Alexander Eraser had a charter, 4th September 1369, of the thanage of lady,
Durris, co. Kincardine, as a free barony. Sir Alexander of Cowie, Durris, and Philorth, granted the barony of Durris by charter, 20th Septen)ber 1400,
Alexandro Fraser filio meo
dilecto, failing issue of his
own second
marriage.
The Durris
family, descendants of the said Alexander, bore Eraser alone with a mullet in chief for difference ; motto " Constant." Durris
—
Thomas Eraser, apparent of Durris, left two and coheiresses, Mary, Helen, wife of Michael Fraser in Kynnardie 1625. His cousin, Alexander, first physician to Charles H., repurchased the estate, had a Crown charter 1665, and was created a baronet of Scotland 2nd August 1673, with remainder cuicunque ejus-filiorum baronidm de Dores providebit et heredibus masculis de corpore dicti filii. Sir Alexander married first, Elizabeth Doughty, and had Alexander, to whom he left ^^50 only, Charles, and Elizabeth secondly, Mary, daughter of Sir Ferdinand Cary, widow of Dudley Wylde, Esq., and had Peter, Cary (married Charles Earl of Peterborough and Monmouth, K.G.), was
sold about 1620, and
—
;
3
T
WORKMAN'S
258
MS.
Katherine married Charles Scarsburgh, and had issue. Sir Alexander executed an entail in 1669, preferring his son of the second marriage, who succeeded him in 1681 as Sir Peter Fraser second baronet of Durris. Sir Peter's seal, 1705, has the arms of Fraser undifferenced crest a stag's head supporters two stags. He married Anne, daughter, and eventually heir of Sir Edward Heron, K.B., of Cressy, co. Lincoln, and and Durris passed to his grandnephew, d.s.p. 1729, when the title expired Lord Mordaunt, and descended to the Duke of Gordon in 1819. It has
—
;
;
—
been sold, and the representation as senior coheir general vests in the
Duke
of Richmond.
John Fraser, fourth son of Thomas of Durris, and Anne Lorymar their descendant, Francis Garden his wife, had sasine of Ferryhill 1597 Fraser of Findrack, in 1864 established his right to the arms and support;
ers as heir male of the Frasers of Durris. L. supporter 135. Lauder of ye Bass. ;
added on the
sinister side
a lion sejant gardant.
Hepburn of Waughton. side,
F.; supporter, added in ink on the dexter
a stag.
CocKBURN OF Langtoun.
—added
in ink
on the dexter
side,
—
—
;
L.
"
is
added
a lion
"
;
supporters
—a
lady holding a branch
a three mullets gules on the chevron in ink as supporter on the sinister side ; motto
F.
—
;
;
;
the cushions are pendant by the
corner.
On
supporter
or,
;
Fordwart in ye name of God." Jhonstoun of Lochwood. L. 136.
;
motto—" Peradvent'vrr
;
;
Amo
Kar of Ferniharst. naked savage
argent, three cocks gules
;
on a bend azure a mullet in the the lower part there are added in ink, crest
Scott of Bewcleuch. upper and two crescents in " a buck's head motto or flower and a buck.
L.
this leaf are sketched in ink the coats of
Dundas of Arniston
—
a lion rampant gules charged on the shoulder with a crescent Dundas of Newliston, a lion rampant holding in his sinister forepaw a fleur-de-lis ; Dundas of Dudingstoun, a lion There are two mottoes his forepaws. rampant gules, a heart between " " " " Dat also the supporters of and incrementum Deus Essayez ; a a buck and Cranstoun, with the initials P. C. lady holding a branch. Sinclair of Hermistone. L. crest, added in ink a demi-eagle ;
;
—
—
—
—
;
motto " Entandtoy" *Urrie of Petfighie. This is the coat on the seal of John Urrie of Pitfiechie 1597, and was registered 1672-78 by Colonel William Urrie, Major crest a lion's paw erased gules, of the King's Regiment of Guards " armed or motto Sans tache." Hugo de Urre, in 1296, swore fealty to Edward L he certainly took his surname from Urr in Galloway, and in 1289 was on an assize as to marches there his son Thomas witnessed a charter of Michael son of Durand. The writer of the remarks on the Ragman Roll suggests, that Sir George Mackenzie thinks Urry of Pitfichie descends from Hugo.
displayed
;
—
;
;
—
;
;
WORKMAN'S
MS.
259
them a branch of the Lords Eure of England, and the crest of Colonel Urrie has some resemblance to that of Eure, but there is nothing more to found on. In 1296 Duncan Urri, a Scot, was a prisoner in Gloucester Castle; David II. granted the lands of Salloch Hill and serjeantry of the county of Stirling to Hew Urrye on the forfeiture of Osbert Stirling; Sir John de Monymusk of Monymusk, co. Aberdeen, had a daughter and heir, Marjory, Lady of Forglen, who married John Eraser, and was dead s.p. 3rd August 1387, on which day her heir, Johanna, spouse of Gilbert Urry, resigned Forglen, which was held of the Abbot of Arbroath, and
was by him granted
to the said
John Eraser.
The Urrys were long seated and in 1460 Andrew Urry asked
at Pitfichy, in the parish of Monymusk, the lands of Eorglen to borch from the
Abbot of Arbroath. The most conspicuous of the name was General Sir John Urry or Hurry, son of John of Pitfichy, and Marjory, daughter of Alexander Chalmers of Cults he had served on the continent, and is described by ;
Spalding as a soldier of fortune, and very changeable, which he certainly was. He was knighted by Charles I. in 1643, and suffered death at the
Market Cross of Edinburgh 29th
May 1650. Sir John, when abroad, married Maria Magdalene, daughter of Christopher Sebastian van Jaxheim of Erlabrun, and left three daughters,
— Elizabeth,
married John Hamilton, Bishop of Dunkeld, and d.s.p. 1694; Joanna died unmarried before 17 15; Maria Margaret married Archibald Lament of that Ilk s.p. She was alive 1715, when she was served heir of her cousin, John Urrie, fellow of Oxford. After her father's death Maria Margaret lived with her mother's relations, and obtained from Sir Charles Erskine, Lyon, a pedigree, 26th January 1669, tracing her descent for nine generations, and showing intermarriages with Eorbes, Lauder, Crichton, Eraser, Leslie, Erskine, &c. this was embodied in a Litera ProsapicB under the great seal, 17th June ;
following.
*Kelle. There are
several coats for this surname, which is orie of locality azure, a saltire between four cinquefoils or, a chief checquy of the second and sable or, a saltire sable between four fleurs-de-lis azure 137.
—
;
for Kellie of
Newton Leys;
or,
a fleur-de-lis in chief azure, below
it
a
fillet or demi-chief and saltire sable. family of the name was long resident at Dunbar, which was represented in parliament by James Kellie 1678, and by Robert 1703-7. William, Writer to the Signet, acquired Eastbarnes, Newton Leys, and other lands from John Viscount Haddington before 1621, and left a son.
A
Thomas of Myreside, captain in the army, and gentleman of the privy chamber, who d.s.p., and eight daughters coheiresses, of whom Margaret married John Seton of St Germains, son of the Earl of Winton, who Sir
—
composed her arms with his own, and bore or, a fess between three crescents in chief and as many fleurs-de-lis in base barways gules. *KiNNERE. Seal of Robert Kinneir, c. 1566 a bend sinister charged
—
with three eagles displayed.
WORKMAN'S
26o Pont gives
for
Kinneir of that
MS,
Ilk, co. Fife
—sable on a bend or three
martlets or papingoes vert. Arms registered, 1672-78, by David of that Ilk three martlets, or Kinnerie birds, vert.
—
sable,
on a bend or
de Kyner, and Amy, his wife, lived in the reign of William the Lyon Simon, son of Simon, made a grant to the church of St Andrew, which was confirmed by Alexander II. 1216; Sir John de Kynnere 1286; Robert II., on 15th August, in the seventh year of his reign, granted a charter to John de Kynneir of the lands of Kynneir as a
Symon ;
free
barony; John of that Ilk sat in parliament 1560. Henry Kinneir was Commendator of Balmerino 1574-1600, and a
Lord of Session. David Kinneir of that
Ilk, last of the direct
male
when a remarkably
line,
died about
1682, rapid succession followed in forty years the estate was held by ten persons, of whom seven were heiresses three of them married into the families of Anstruther of Balcaskie, Mackenzie of Cromarty, and Bayne. ;
;
Cecilia
Bayne Kinneir of Kinneir married,
1751,
William Douglas of
the Tilwhilly family, elder brother of Bishop of Salisbury ; their daughter, Cecilia Maria Douglas Kinneir of Kinneir married, 1776, John Macdonald of Sanda, and sold the estate in 1795. Their son, Sir John
Kinneir Macdonald, C.B., Envoy to the Shah of Persia, d.s.p. his brother, William, Archdeacon of Wilts, was grandfather of the present representative, Douglas J. Kinnear-Macdonald of Sanda. Kinnear is now the property of John Boyd Kinnear of Kinloch. Neilsoune. Gules, a dexter and a sinister hand in chief and a dexter hand in base couped at the wrist argent. ;
*Taw. *MuLLiKiNE. David II., in the thirty-second year of his reign, granted to James Mulekyne, a Florentine, the office of monetarius for life,
all
Adam
and he had
also, along with Tor, the privilege of exchanging in Scotland; in 1364 Donatus Mulekyn is paid for ornaments
money made for the King. The surname
as
Mullikene, Mulligane, Amuligane, &c., appears during the fifteenth century in Galloway; in 1492 Fergus Muligane was proprietor of Blackmyre, which remained with his descendants for about
two hundred
years.
In January 1741 the arms were allowed to Major James Milliken of " Milliken, co. Renfrew, with a demi-lion for crest, and the motto, Regarde bien^ He died the following month, at the age of seventy-one, and the Funeral Escutcheon gives as his mother one of the daughters and co-heirs of Alexander Eraser of Knock, Ayrshire; his grandmother, a Hamilton of Inchgotrick; and his great-grandmother, a Ferguson of Auchinsoul. Major Milliken had purchased Johnstone in 1733, and altered the
name to Milliken who predeceased
James Milliken of Milliken, had two sons, him, and two daughters ^Jean married, 1764, Lieu-
;
his son,
—
WORKMAN'S
MS,
tenant-Colonel William Napier of Culcreuch, Spens of Craigsanquhar, M.D.
261
Mary married Nathaniel
*MoWTRAY. 139.
L.
Squire.
;
the mullet
is or,
and a note
is
added, "hath two
molletts in chief."
Galbraith.
L.
;
the bears' heads are not muzzled.
Mr
Laing de-
Malcolm Galbrathe, 1409, as three boars' heads couped contourn6, and those in 1542 on that of Walter as three
scribes the charges
on the
seal of
boars' heads erased.
Sir
James Balfour says greyhounds' heads, while Porteus makes the
heads those of the wolf. Nisbet appears to be right in saying bears' heads. Maknawth. Argent, a chevron between two mullets in chief and a crescent in base sable, WiGMOiR. L. this curious coat, impaled with Scott, is cut on a stone on a house at Jedburgh, probably as old as the middle of the six;
teenth century.
John Wigmer, alderman of Edinburgh, 1344 John Wigmor, lord of Over-Liberton, 1362, is probably the John Wigmer who sat in the general council at Perth two years later, and in parliament 1369 Sir Roger the a of land from common had of the town Wygmor, 1392, grant good of Edinburgh. The name is met with later there but seems to be extinct Hair of yt Ilk. Argent, a chief sable so in Porteus' MS. Patrick Hayre, burgess of Ayr, 1428 Thomas, doomster of parliament 1546 James represented Lanark in parliament 1686. From a family which possessed Rankinstone in Ayrshire for several ;
;
;
;
;
generations, descended James Hair, a physician in India, Calderhall in Mid-Lothian, c. 1802, and d.s.p. His heirs spell the name Hare no arms registered.
who
acquired
;
Strang.
L. Cairnis. 140.
Or, three martlets azure, within a bordure engrailed
gules.
—
Porteus gives Waterton azure, a sea pellok sqjant (a naked man playing) a harp on his back argent. Seal of Mr Robert Valterston, provost of Bothans, 1537, a lion statant, in chief a crescent between two mullets. Galfrid de Waterville witnessed the charter of foundation of the Abbey of Lindores 1 202-6 James de Walterston, 1 296 William de Walteristoun, 1329; Thomas de Wateriston, confessor to the king, 1343; David de Walteristoun, 1359-63, had an annualrent from the thanage of Tannadice John de Walteryston was father of David, who, in 1407, had a crown charter of the lands of Walteryston, co. Forfar, and the said
*Valtertoun.
;
;
;
annualrent; David of that Ilk, 1447-50; Hugh of that Ilk, 1488-1519; the family seems to have begun to decline soon after, as in 1535 David is designed portioner of Waterstoun. Crawfurd says there was a family of Waterstoun of that Ilk in Renfrewshire, and that James sold the lands in 1384.
3U
WORKMAN'S
262
MS,
*ScHAN. Schand or Shand, a surname which is met with in Aberdeenshire from the beginning of the sixteenth century. Arms on the tombstone of William, merchant, burgess of Aberdeen, who died 1660 a boar's head couped and a chief charged with three His son, William of Craig, left descendants. The arms were mullets. azure, a boar's registered 1672-78 by Thomas, late treasurer in Aberdeen a of the second three mullets gules. head couped argent, on chief YE WoD OF 141. (name obliterated, and Bonnington written
—
—
below), L.
Chamer of Gitgerth.
Argent, a triple branch vert, on a chief between two a crescent mullets of the first. (?) gules Quhippo, see K.
*ScROGE
;
Bishop 1673.
These arms were registered by William
Scrogie, Bishop of Argyle, 1666-75, with the heart argent. "William Scrougie, commissary of Argyle, representer of Scrougie of or, a chevron azure between two scrougs Inveri, a few years later entered (or branches wanting leaves) in chief and a man's heart in base proper.
—
Robert de Scrogges having lost his
in the service of
life
David de Line,
the latter granted, c. 1200, to his son, Simon de Scrogges, a charter of his lands of Scrogges in Lyne, co. Peebles, which was confirmed before 12 13 by Robert de Line, son of David. Soon after Simon, with consent of his brothers William and Hucting, sold Scrogges to the Bishop of Glasgow. In 1296 Adam del Skrogges, burgess of Haddington, and William del Skrogges of Peeblesshire swore fealty to Edward L David de
Scrogges in 1413 owned land in Aberdeen John of Scrogis or Skrogs, elder, burgess of Aberdeen 1440-50; John, probably his son, sat in parliament for the burgh 1445, and was provost William Scrogs, vicar of Nig The bishop was son of Alexander, D.D., minister of Old Machar, 1453. ;
;
who
died 1659, at a great age. L.
LiBBERTOUN.
Abercroome,
A.
*Barclay. 142.
Wyntoun of yat Ilk, L. Anan of Aucherallan now his in Edenr 1664. Arms as before.
brother's soun of yt hous, 143. minester *Fanzis. At the very beginning of the thirteenth century, Richard de Faunes, brother of David de Grahame, held lands in Mellerstaing, their mother being Amable; Adam, son of Richard was dead c. 1250, his nephew and heir being Philip de Haliburton. Faunis belonged also to persons of the name, benefactors to the monks of Dryburgh, Adam de Faunis, Nicholas, father of Richard and of Eda. *Cader. The stag's head is cabossed on all the seals of the Thanes of Cawdor and their descendants given in Mr Laing's volumes from 1431 ;
to 1573.
" See " The Thanes of Cawdor by
*Prymross of Auld. adds three mullets of the
Cosmo Innes, Esq. Another MS. makes the crescent
field
on the
fess.
gules,
and
WORKMAN'S
MS.
263
—
In 1613 the seal of James of Burnbrae, is on a chevron between three primroses as many mullets, in middle chief a crescent. seal, without date, of James Primrose bears three mullets and a chief charged with as many primroses. Sir James Balfour's blazon is azure, a chevron argent between three
A
— primrose proper. Stacie gives as " an old coatt —argent, on a slips
"
between three primrose flowers gules as many mullets or, and this is given in G., and another MS. has it as the arms of Burnbrae family. Jenkins has Prymrois azure, a chevron argent between three primrose flowers or. " Sir Archibald Primrose of Dalmenie, knight and baronet, be his Majestic Charles ye ii. 1667, create vert, three primroses within a double tressure flowered counter-flowered or. His creast a demi-lyon gules holding in his right paw a primross or; motto 'Fide et fiducia.' fess azure
;
—
;
—
Altered again 1672." Next he has inserted an engraving of arms or, a lion rampant vert surmounted of a fess " pourpre or blew," charged with three primroses of " For Sir Archibald the field Primrose 1672 ;" above, "now the below, lion must be over and above the fess."
—
;
The
entry in the register is for Sir Archibald of Carrington, baronet. Clerk to His Majesty's Council Register and Rolls or, a lion rampant vert armed and langued gules, over all on a fess purpure three primroses of the field crest and motto as before, except that the primrose " is proper. Nota, sometymes he gives the fess next to the field, and over all the lyon, and 'tis presum'd the last extract bears so." first
—
;
Next comes 1693, his eldest son, by his second wife, Giels, daughter of Sir William Gray of Pittendrum, Archibald of Dalmeny first and fourth —or, a lion rampant vert armed and langued gules, as the coat of augmentation given by his sacred Majestic, Charles the second, of ever ;
blessed
memory
to his said father, as a
mark
of favour for his services to
—
the crown during the late troubles second and third argent, on a fess azure between three primroses gules as many mullets or, as the paternal " Munus et muniinen." coat; crest as before motto ;
;
—
A
Royal warrant, 12th March 1702, authorised Lyon to give and; assign to Archibald Viscount Rosebery "a double tressure counterflowered as in the Royall arms of Scotland his lordship was created Earl of Rosebery, and his patent of arms i6th November 1703, blazons thus vert, three primroses or within a double tressure flowered counter"Portent flowered of fleur-de-lis gules (sic); crest as before; motto dementia decet ;'' supporters two horses at liberty argent. ;
;
—
—
In 1823 Archibald, Earl of Rosebery, matriculated the above, making The original motto the tressure or, and quartering Cressy of Birkin. was resumed and the supporters were two lions or; they had sometimes
been carried vert. The Viscounts Primrose carried as supporters two leopards regardant proper collared and chained or, the collars charged with three primroses vert, but of this there is no registration.
WORKMAN'S
264
MS.
In the Funeral Escutcheons are Prymrose of Burnbrae —argent, on Primrose of Whitehous—or, a a fess purpure three primrose flowers or. lion rampant vert surmounted of a fess azure charged with three primroses of the field, in dexter chief a crescent. The surname is probably taken from the lands of Primrose near Dunfermline. In 1387 an agreement was made between the Provost of the burgh of Edinburgh and the community on the one part, and Jonne Prymros and
two others masons on the
on Prymros having no
other, they undertaking to build five chapels
the south side of the parish church of Edinburgh. seal of his own, uses that of James of Fulforde.
There are
in the chartulary of St Giles, notes of payments, 1399-1402, de John Prymros, dictus Johannes Prymros, for that work. Archibald Primrose, clericus mineralium, acquired Burnbrae, co. Perth, which descended to John, who left two daughters, Jane and Rachel, the former of whom sold the estate 1836, and acquired other lands in the county of Edinburgh, which were called Burnbrae, and held under the entail executed in 1770 by Edward Primrose. James, clerk of the Privy Council, younger son of Burnbrae, founded the ennobled branch. Primrose of Whitehouse ended in an heiress, who married David
to
Heriot, advocate.
John Primrose, merchant in Stockholm, was recognised as noble in Sweden 1650. *Knox of Ramfarly. Seal of Matthew Knok 1547, a fess checquy between two roundles in chief and a lozenge in base. Arms registered, 1693, by Thomas Knox, then in Ireland, son of Thomas, a descendant of the family of Ramforly, co. Renfrew ^gules, a falcon volant or, within an orle waved on the outer and engrailed on the inner side argent crest a " motto Moveo et prqficiory falcon perching proper The Knoxes of Renfrewshire probably adopted the fess checquy, as vassals of the High Stewards, as the Flemings of Barochan did, while the Sempills and Houstons, for the same reason, bore a chevron checquy; " " roundles may be the roses, the bearing of the name of perhaps the
—
;
—
—
;
Knolles, Knowes, or Knox, elsewhere treated of. John of Knok was falconer to James IV., and the falcon is perhaps allusive to his office in the Royal Household. The blazon given by Pont, and is Hamilton Porteus, Stacie, ^gules, within an orle engrailed argent a falcon volant or. Nisbet represents the orle as plain on the outer, and Porteous has another vert, a martlet and engrailed on the inner side.
—
—
a bordure argent. There are in Renfrewshire two places called Knock. One in the parish of Renfrew, was sold c. 1234 by Dugald, son of Christinus dempster of Lennox, to the Abbot of Paisley his overlord. The other is in the parish of Kilbarchan.
John of Knok witnesses charters c. 1250; William, 1273; John, 1284 Alan del Knoc or Knokis 1328-30 Robert Knock of that Ilk had ;
;
WORKMAN'S a charter of his lands from Robert III.
MS.
265
William was Prior of the Friars
Predicant, Glasgow, 1470.
The
In the account of printed pedigrees of this family are incorrect. Ranfurlie, John of that place, his wife Eupheme Galbraith, and their son Patrick, who survived in 161 1, are all omitted. Selviland, in the parish of Kilbarchan, is said to have been acquired by William, a younger son of Uchter Knox of Ranfurlie, by marriage with the heiress of the same name no such family had existed for more than ;
two centuries, as about 1300 Adam, son and heir of the deceased Patrick de Selvinisland, resigned that property which was granted to the ancestor of the Halls of Fulbar.
The
"
History of Glasgow," 1872, contains notices by the editor, and by Mr J. Bain, F.S.A. Scot., showing the true succession of the Knoxes of Selviland, and of the burgesses of Glasgow, their alleged descendants.
Mark, merchant burgess, married, before 1594, Margaret Greynleis, and was alive in 161 1. His younger son, Thomas, merchant in Glasgow, married Elizabeth Spang, of a burgess family there, and left three sons :
Thomas
Dungannon, a member of the Privy Council of Ireland, who had the certificate of arms 1693 2. John, father of Thomas of Belliecreilly, in Ireland, who, in 1734, was served heir general of his uncle William, merchant in Glasgow 3. William, just named. Thomas of Belliecreilly was father of Thomas Viscount Northland Thomas, second Viscount, on being created an Earl, took the title of Ranfurly, from the seat of the Knoxes in Renfrewshire. Of the Renfrewshire family were Andrew, Bishop of the Isles and afterwards of Raphoe, who died in 1632, and his son Thomas, Bishop of I.
of
;
;
;
the Isles.
John Knox, the Reformer, has been said to be of the Renfrewshire family of this there is no proof, as all that is known is, that his father William was a native of, and resident at Haddington and Knox told the ;
;
" " borne a good mynd to his family, " for, Earl of Bothwell that he had my lord, my grandfather, goodsher, and father, have served your lordshipis predecessors, and some of thame have died under their standardis." *HuNNYMAN. Porteus has argent, five bendlets gules aliter^ three bendlets with cottises engrailed on the outside, a crescent or. There is a remarkable seal of Andrew Honyman, Bishop of Orkney, 1664 quarterly, first, on a bend three mullets second and third, a fess countercompony fourth, a burning heart encircled by a wreath over all a fess charged with a crescent between two crescents inverted. The Bishop, who was son of David in Pitairchney, co. Fife, a man of no family, seems thus not to have used the Honyman coat at all the fess is probably for Stewart of Graemsay in Orkney, he having married None of his descendants registered arms till the heiress of that family.
—
;
—
;
;
;
;
when William
of Graemsay, advocate, afterwards Sir William of Armadale, baronet, and Senator of the College of Justice, was allowed argent, a bend engrailed gules voided of the field. 1788,
—
3x
-
WORKMAN'S
266
MS.
The name occurs among burgesses and merchants at St Andrews about 1 570 Thomas had a charter of part of the lands of Balcrystie, in the ;
east of Fife. 144.
The
*Craufurd.
D. C. are added.
initials
—
In January 1675, John Crawfurd of Camlarg registered argent, a hart's head erased sable armed or distilling drops of blood proper. In 1789 John of Auchinames, as representing the families of Kerse, Camlarg, &c., recorded quarterly, first and fourth, gules a fess ermine second and third, argent, a stag's head erased gules, between his attires a cross crosslet fitchde sable and was allowed supporters two bulls sable
—
;
—
;
armed and unguled
or.
Ten years
before Patrick George Craufurd, a cadet, had entered arms, the stag's head being in the first and fourth quarters and without the crosslet.
present Edward Henry John Craufurd of Auchenames and Crosbie, again recorded arms and supporters as in 1789, but without the cross crest a stag's head erased gules, between the attires a cross
The
—
;
crosslet fitchde sable
;
—
motto
"
Tutum
te robore
reddam."
There were cut in stone over the gateway at Kerse, in Ayrshire, as supporters, a greyhound and a bull both gorged with coronets and chained.
the funeral, in 1751, of the Hon. Mrs Sarah Craufurd of Auchenames, a daughter of Lord Sempill, a bull sable was the dexter supporter, the sinister being a talbot argent.
At
HowisouNE.
Argent, a man's heart proper, on a chief azure a fleur-
de-lis or.
—
Cathkeine. a comparatively modern addition argent, a chevron azure between two roses in chief gules and a dagger point downwards in base of the second.
A
seal in
1550 bears a
Wardlaw
145. three mascles or.
sal tire
of Torry.
Bruce of Clackmannan. Tennand of yt Ilk. F.
with a mullet in
Much
chief.
obliterated, but apparently azure,
L.
Barclay of
Collairnie. Most of the Barclays in Scotland, a a chevron between the crosses cadet of have this family, including pat^e.
In 1725 Robert Barclay of Urie, as representing Barclay of Mathers, crest a dove with azure, three crosses patde in chief argent registered " " in its mottoes Cedant arma branch mouth and " /u olive an proper
—
;
—
;
—
hac vince." having ended in an heiress, Mrs Margaret BarclayAllardice, the heir male, Arthur Kett Barclay of Bury Hill, co. Surrey, in 1858 recorded arms with alterations, and was allowed the supporters which had been previously borne by the Barclay of Urie, but not registered— azure, a chevron, and in chief three crosses patde argent a bishop's mitre affrontee with tassels flottant upwards or motto crest
The
—
direct line
;
;
—
WORKMAN'S MS. — supporters two savages wreathed round
"
267
the loins In cruce s^ero ;'" with oak leaves, holding in their exterior hands clubs erect proper. Walter de Berkeley was chamberlain of Scotland 1 165, and the family,
in several branches, maintained a high position. John of Collairnie died in 1709, leaving a daughter and heir, Antonia, who married, in 17 17, Henry Steuart, advocate, second son of
Sir James of Goodtrees, Lord Advocate. Stacie has for Collairnie azure, a chevron or between three crosses crest pat6e argent " Honus est onus." ;
The
—a
—
bear's
head argent, muzzled gules
motto
;
—
England, as given in Glover's and At the siege of Caerla^gules, a chevron argent. verock, Maurice de Berkeley bore ^gules, crusilly a chevron argent, a In a Roll of the time of Edward II. are given label of three points azure. the arms of Sir Maurice ^gules, sem6e of crosses patde a chevron argent and of Sir John of Gloucestershire gules, a chevron argent between three original
arms of Berkeley
Charles' Rolls, were—
in
—
—
—
;
crosses pat^e or.
A
—
the crest of the Earls of Berkeley, who bear chevron between the crosses patde, six in chief and four in base.
mitre
is
Trumbill. Argent, a bull's head erased sable. Broun of Colstoun. L. Streueling. As Cadder, L. An old family taking 146. *Mastourstoun.
their
^gules,
a
surname from
the lands of Masterton, near Dunfermline. The writer, in 1878, commu" nicated a notice of them to the Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica," which was also printed for private circulation.
de Villa Magistri
witness to a charter, c. 1250; his son, William de Meistreton, of the county of Fife, swore fealty to Edward I. Their descendants held Master1296, and sealed with a lion rampant. ton till the sixteenth century. Soon after the Reformation, Alexander, probably a descendant of Masterton of that Ilk, had a feu-charter of part of Grange; in 1673 Adam Masterton of Grange registered argent, a chevron between two crescents in chief and a mullet in base gules, on a chief azure an eagle
Hugo
is
—
displayed or.
Alexander Masterton acquired Parkmill, his representative, Francis of that place, a chevron gules and a chief azure.
Clackmannan, 1547, and registered arms 1 672-78-—argent, co.
The
seal of Robert Masterton of Bad, 1588, is an eagle displayed a impaling chevron with a crescent in chief or on a chief. Other variations occur in the MSS. *Heart of yt Ilk. See before in this MS. In L. for Dudingstoun. 147. *Hawdeinstoun of Southhouse. Greinlaw of yt Ilk. L. seal of Gilbert, Bishop of Aberdeen, 1422 a chevron between three water bougets.
—
Arms
;
—
registered by Robert Greenlies, M.D., c. 1750 argent, a fleurde-lis vert between three mullets gules, a bordure engrailed of the second.
WORKMAN'S
268 The surname
MS.
taken from Greenlaw, co. Berwick. William de Grenlaw, c. 1190; Roland de Grenelawe entered into an agreement, c. 1200, with the Abbot of Kelso, as to the church of Greenlaw, and, in In 1296 William de Grenlawe, and 1208, was /// atria Regis at Selkirk. Matthew his son, swore fealty to Edward I. ; George of Greenlaw sat in is
parliament 1464-73. There is a very close resemblance between this coat and that of Glass.
Reid of Colistoun.
F.
;
the eagle
is
sable
and the inescutcheon
gules.
Duns of yt Ilk. F. *Stevinsounne of Hermandshiels, in Mid-Lothian Stevenson of that Ilk, CO. Lanark, was an old family Johan de Steuenston and Esteuene de Steuenston swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296 John of that ;
;
;
Ilk lived after the restoration,
and seems
to have been the last of the
family seated there.
Hermandshiels was the property of the Stevensons during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in 1693 Alexander of Chesters, grandson of a younger son, registered arms argent, on a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis azure a cross moline of the first, on a chief gules three
—
;
mullets or. In 1674, Archibald, M.D., who was afterwards knighted, recorded argent, a chevron between three fleurs-de-lis azure, on a chief of the
—
second three mullets of the first. Sir James Balfour gives Stevinstone of that Ilk or, three falcons' heads erased proper. John Stevenson represented Peebles in parliament 1593. Sinclair of Blanss. F. ; the second and third quarters, argent,
—
three martlets gules, 148.
*Carkatill of yt Ilk.
The arms
of Marion, wife of Walter
Chepman, cut on a stone, c. 15 15, in the Chepman aisle, St Giles' Church, Edinburgh, have the addition of a mullet in base.
The
seal of
John of Fynglen, 1555, has the heads couped.
There were branches seated at Markle, Over-Liberton, Monkrig, and Nunland, and a family of Edinburgh burgesses of importance. John sat in parliament for Haddington 1584.
*DUKET. *Gede. Arms
registered, 1672-78,
by Robert Ged of that
three geds, or pykes, haurient argent. The family was seated at Baldrig, near Dunfermline
Ilk
—azure,
James Geddie sat in parliament for Grail 1587, and John for St Andrews 1667-78 William Gedd represented Burntisland 1670-72, and Alexander 1689;
;
1700.
Spottiswood of yt Ilk. The coat with three garbs as before. •Makclelland of yt Ilk. *Geddes of Glenquholm. Arms registered, 1672-78, by John Geddes of Rachan, co. Peebles, " descended of the familie of Geddes, 149.
WORKMAN'S of that Ilk, which is now extinct" three pike heads couped or.
MS.
269
—gules, an inescutcheon argent between
—
Pont has another blazon argent, on a fess gules between two spur rowels in chief and a hunting-horn in base sable garnished of the second, three pikes naiant or. John of Geddes, bailie of Peebles, 1398 John possessed half of Ladyurd 1406; Kirkurd and Rachan were also their property soon after; John Geddes was a benefactor to the parish church of Peebles, one of the aisles of which was named after him James sold Rachan, &c., 1752, and ;
;
two years; the family was represented, in 1779, by James, merchant in Edinburgh, son of James of Rachan by Helen, daughter and coheir of Hugh Somerville of Inverteil, W.S. Reidpeth of yt Ilk. L. Lawson of Humbe. Azure, two crescents in chief and a mullet in died
in
base argent.
Wallace of Ellerslie.
F.
this coat
;
was recorded
in
1808 as a
quartering by Sir Hay Campbell of Succoth, baronet, Lord President of the College of Justice, when the bordure was altered to counter compony.
*Steuart of Trachquair.
second, Buchan ; third, Rutherford, as descended from the heiress of Rutherford of that Ilk; fourth, the star has been said to be for the title of Traquair, or to indicate 150.
First, Stewart
;
James Stewart first of Traquair. He was natural son of James, Earl of Buchan, by Margaret Murray; the Earl acquired Traquair in 1478, and in 1491 granted it by charter to his son. The arms here have added to them as crest a bird motto " Juge " nocht supporter on the dexter side a stork, the supporter of the Earls of Buchan in this MS. The Earls of Traquair for a time bore Stewart and Gumming the maternal descent of
—
;
;
—
quarterly, with a crescent gules in chief for difference. The arms registered by Earl Charles, c. 1672, have the mullet in the third, and Rutherford in the fourth quarter ; crest— on a garb a crow " proper; motto Judge nought;" supporters two bears proper, armed
—
argent.
— — argent were
—
In 1742 arms sable, a mullet granted to the 5-ev. Thomas Troughear, descended from the Rev. Mr Troughear alias Traquair, vicar of Till-crux, in Cumberland, in the reign of James VI. 151. TouRis of Innerleith. Or, on a bend azure three crescents of the field. Kellieof(?Wauchtoun). Or, a fleur-de-lis in chief azure debruised The saltire and bar seem to of a bar sable, below the bar a saltire sable. have been gules and then painted over.
Maitland of Lethinton.
L.
;
the lion
is
not armed and langued
azure.
Edmistoun of yt
— two
camels
— margin a mound. ;
L.; there are sketched in ink for supporters another crest on the camel's head campaned
Ilk.
crest—a
Prestoun of Cragmiler.
;
L.
;
a wyvern as crest
3 Y
is
sketched in ink.
WORKMAN'S
2 70
MS.
Naper of Marchinstoun. L. Napier only. First, Buchan 152. Arms of Henry, third Lord Cardross, c 1680. second and third, Mar and Erskine quarterly fourth, Douglas of Loch;
;
;
leven
;
an escutcheon of pretence Stewart within a bordure gules
in
charged with eight buckles or. Arms of his son David, afterwards fourth Lord Cardross and Earl of Buchan. second. Mar and Erskine, in the centre of the third, Stewart as before ; fourth, quarters a crescent sable for difference Douglas of Lochleven. First,
Buchan
;
;
153.
Cunningham.
Twelve shields
ing of tinctures, but each with differences.
in ink
without names or mark-
VII.
KINGS'
AND NOBILITY'S ARMS, C, A.D.
1566.
»» I"
KINGS'
AND
NOBILITY'S ARMS.
It has not been thought necessary to give a list of the coats comprised them are contained in W., or the other
in this collection, as nearly all of MSS. noticed.
coat registered, 1672-78, by Thomas Edward of Longcroft, co. Linlithgow, is azure, a fess argent, over all a marble pillar gules issuing out of the nombrill wavy. He belonged to a family of merchant burgesses of Linlithgow, who flourished for several generations. Nicol Udwart was Dean of Guild of Edinburgh 1584, Provost 1592, sat in parliament, and was tacksman of the mint. Isobella Edwards inherited the barony of Persie, co. Forfar, from her grandfather John, married Robert, younger son of Sir Alexander
*Vdwart.
The
—
Wedderburn, baronet, and left issue. The seal of George Edward, 1441, is a chevron charged with a two mullets in chief and a holly leaf and a buckle in base.
rose,
*GiLBERT. Porteus blazons this coat argent, three trefoils proper, on a chevron azure three fleurs-de-lis or; but the seal, 1588, of Michael Gilbert, a bailie of Edinburgh, has the charges the same as here given. This Michael, a rich jeweller, sat in parliament for Edinburgh, and one of his daughters married the Lord President, John Preston of Fentonbarns in the funeral escutcheons of their children, Gilbert is designed of that Ilk or of Liberton. The family held securities over the lands of Drum and Gutters in ;
the parish of Liberton. It is remarkable that when Sir Andrew Gilmour, advocate, whose brother possessed the estate of Craigmiller, in Liberton, and bore for arms azure, three writing pens feathered argent, was created a baronet 1661, he had a confirmation of arms, closely resembling those of Gilbert, from Sir Alexander Durham, Lyon argent, on a chevron between three trefoils vert, as many fleurs-de-lis or. In 1733, Sir Charles Gilmour, third baronet of the second creation, 1678, registered arms and obtained a coat, which gives charges from both the earlier ones azure, a chevron between two fleurs-de-lis in chief or, and a writing pen full feathered argent in base. In January 161 1 the following coat was confirmed to James Gullimore, resident in London gules, nine billets argent. Stacie. Faa. The coat in L. for Haldinstoun, and in some MSS. called Dudingston. It nearly resembles that given by Nisbet for Balderston, and for which he refers to the Lyon Register, but the arms are not recorded. The modern coat of Fall is a fess checquy between three
—
—
—
—
3z
KINGS AND NOBILITY'S ARMS.
2 72
boars' heads
;
Dudingston
is
a chevron between three cross crosslets
fitchde.
—
Stuidman.
Porteus gives two other varieties of this argent, three shell snails vert and, a fess vert between three house snails azure. This never was a family of much position, and no arms have been ;
recorded. In the Exchequer Rolls, 1369, there is a payment to Patrick Stedman. In the sixteenth century the name appears in connection with lands in Kinross-shire, and at a later period parts of the lands of Ballingall, Coldrain, and Wester Baldridge were possessed by persons of the name. Chalmers' " History of Dunfermline" contains a genealogy of the Stedmans of Baldridge, represented, when that work was published, by Charles von Barton alias Stedman, a landed proprietor in Rhenish Prussia, whose ancestors, for three generations, had been officers of the Scots Brigade in the service of the States General of the United Provinces. family of Barton, in the seventeenth century, bore a similar coat three shell snails or, but there seems no reason to identify the surgules,
—
A
names.
Captaine Donaldsone. This name is in a different hand, apparently more modern, and the arms do not in the least resemble those of Donaldson. They are barry of six gules and argent, six martlets sable, three and three, on the two upper bars argent. *Brokas. Pont blazons this coat argent, a demi-lion sable issuing
—
—
from the sea proper, a bordure engrailed of the second. Porteus gives argent, a lion rampant sable within a bordure azure. The name is a very rare one in 1489 Thomas Brokas had a pardon ;
having held the castle of Dumbarton against the king. *TuRNOUR. This surname, derived from an occupation, appears as early as 1382, in the Register of the Great Seal, when Thomas dictus Tumour, is named in a charter of John Crab, burgess of Aberdeen. Mr for
Hector, 1572-75, was in the service of the Earl of Errol. Early in the sixteenth century the lands of Kinminity, in the parish of Birse, were in the possession of John Turner, from whom they descended to his namesake, a merchant in Dantzic. This gentleman, by will 17th July 1688, confirmed 23rd September 1690, left legacies for educational and charitable purposes, and the residue of his fortune to buy " to be held blench from the Crown," to be entailed on his cousin, land, Robert Turner, then under age, son of Andrew in Kinminity, deceased, and others, obliging heirs female and their husbands to bear the surname and arms of Turner. The executors, in 1693-94, acquired the barony of Rosehill, formerly Hilltown, and the lands of Newark and others, in Aberdeenshire, all of which were united into the barony of Turnerhall, now held by the representative of the family. Major John Turner. Mr John Turner's heir-at-law, John, son of Andrew Turner, succeeded him in the Kinminity property, died in 1699, and his heir in 1742 was his nephew, John Turner of Kinminity, then sergeant in Major-General
Otway's regiment in Ireland. The Turners of Kindrocht and Tillinaught, whose heiress married an Ogilvie, were probably of the same stock.
A family of Turner
flourished in the parish of
New
Abbey, and held
AND NOBILITYS ARMS,
KINGS'
273
the estate of Ardwell for many generations. In 1585 John of Ardwell, of the and several other of the name, were pardoned Hill, John persons for intercommuning with the Earl of Morton. John sat in parliament for the burgh of Wigtown 161 2-21, and at the same time John was Sheriff-Clerk of Wigtownshire. William, last of Ardwell, was dead in 1800, when his heirs were his
nephew, Martin Black, and his grand-nephew, Robert Rigg. The most conspicuous person of the name in Scotland was Sir James Turner, who, after serving with distinction abroad, was employed by Charles II. and James II. in military commands in Scotland. His written were at After "Memoirs," printed by himself, Edinburgh 1829. what has been said, it seems like a bull to state that his name was not Sir James was born in 1614, at properly Turner at all, but Turnett. of which his Mr Patrick Borthwick, father, Turnett, was then minister, his mother being Margaret Law, daughter of James, Archbishop of Glasgow. His younger brother, Archibald, D.D., one of the ministers of Edinburgh, Almoner to the King, and Subdean of the Chapel Royal, although generally known by the name of Turner, like his brother, appears in the list of graduates of the University of Edinburgh as Archibaldus Turnetus he d.s.p. 1681, when Sir James was served heir to him in Brunton and other properties. ;
Both brothers registered arms 1672-78, the coat of the younger being by a crescent quarterly, first and fourth, sable, a Katherine wheel argent; second and third argent, three guttes de sang proper; crest a heart flaming motto " Tm ne cede malis"
—
differenced
—
;
Some MSS. call CoLQUHOUN OF
—
—
the guttes de sang guzes. Luss. Argent, a saltire engrailed between
four
crescents sable.
Atoun.
Gules (or azure ?, the colour stained and faded), a cross four crescents argent. between engrailed Frizell. Argent, three furisons azure. This is given in other MSS. for Steill, with the tinctures altered in some blazons the charges ;
are called
frizells.
Argent, three branches conjoined in base vert, on a chief gules a crescent between two mullets of the field. This is given in W. for Chalmers of Gadgirth, but seems to be the arms of Quhippo. Po;it has for that name argent, a tree in pale issuing out of the base, the middlemost grains {sic, ? branch) half couped vert, on a chief azure a mullet between two crescents of the field. Porteus' blazon for Quhippo is vert, an oak tree growing or, on a .
—
—
chief argent three stars gules. Sir Robert Quhippo or Quhippup, chaplain, had a suit in 1495 as to the ferry at Clydesholm. Leyhouses, Kidlaw, and other lands in East Lothian belonged to a family who figure frequently in the criminal trials William had been killed near Kidlaw by Hamilton of Samuelston ; his brother, Robert, a burgess of Edinburgh, killed the brother of the laird of Spottiswoode, and having been found guilty of various thefts, was hanged at the market cross of Edinburgh 1598; in June 1595 Thomas of Leyhouses was killed by John Spottiswoode of that Ilk, who, ten years after, was denounced rebel for not surrendering to be tried. In 1614 David of Leyhouses was served heir of his father, Thomas, and soon after they disappear from the district. ;
-
2
KINGS AND NOBILITTS ARMS.
74
*Neilsoun of Kilcawfe or Craigcaffie. This coat was altered before the registration, 1672-78, by Gilbert Neilsone of Craigcaffie to parted per chevron argent and or, in chief two sinister hands erect couped gules and in base a dagger point downwards azure. John, son of Niel, had several charters of lands, including Kellechaffe, from Robert I. Craigcaffie, which was erected into a barony in the sixteenth century, remained in possession of the Neilsons till far on in the eighteenth. Nisbet gives a notice of the Neilsons of Corsock, who bore different
—
arms.
*Elwat of Reidheuch see W. for another coat. Eliott, added to Porteus' MS. gules, on a bend or between two pheons argent a baton of the first and Elliott of Lairistoun gules, on a bend or a baton of the
—
;
—
;
first.
is
The coat registered in 1673 by Sir Gilbert Elliot of Stobs, baronet, —gules, on a bend engrailed or a baton azure crest — an arm holding a ;
cutlass
;
but Stacie mentions that the ancient crest was a basket
full
of
fruits or eiles.
In 1859 Sir William Francis Eliott of Stobs and Wells was allowed add the augmentation and supporters granted to Lord Heathfield. The charge on the bend would seem to have been a club, and is here re-
to
presented as strengthened with rings of metal afterwards it is called a in other blazons the baton baton, and made plain and symmetrical becomes a flute, with holes for the mouth and fingers. In Colonel Williams' patent the flute is more like a horn or flageolet, with a small mouthpiece at one end and wider at the other end. Mr Robert Bruce Armstrong has very kindly allowed me to make use of the result of his investigations into the early history of the Elliots, and I am thus enabled to give a correct notice of the Redheuch family, and of the origin of the Larriston and Braidley branches. Elwald, a personal name, became a surname, and was gradually altered to Elwood, Eliot, or Allot, finally to Elliot or Eliot. In 1587 the Ellottis are mentioned as a clan on the middle march, having a chief. In 1488 Robert Elwald of Thorleshope, and his brother Patrick, occur, and that place long remained the seat of a branch of the Elliots. During the sixteenth century the heads of the house of Redheuch were recognised as chiefs of the clan. I. Robert El wold, who was alive in 1491, and at that time an aged man, is supposed to have been chief of his clan. He was probably born ;
;
between 1420 and 1430. His son, II. Robert El wold, who had been Captain of the Hermitage, died shortly before
November
1491.
Robert Elwold, his son, at that period was a person of the first * consequence in Liddesdale he was probably the Robert known as early as 1508 as of Redheuch, and who is again mentioned in 1510. If he was the Master Eliot who was killed at Flodden, he must have left besides Robert, his successor, two sons, William of Larriston, and Archibald. IV. Robert Elliot, supposed to have been the eldest son of the last mentioned, was of Redheuch in 1515-1516, and was Captain of the III.
;
* In the list of 1494-1495 there are five Elwalds bearing the Christian name of Robert. One "called King," another "of Langhalch," another "senior," another "the Earl," and another "young ridar."
KINGS'
AND
NOBILITY'S ARMS.
275
Hermitage in 1531.* He also appears in 1546, 1546- 1547, and 1548. In 1 548- 1 549 he is again mentioned as Captain of the Hermitage, and must have died before 1557. He had at least two sons Robert, and Martin of
—
Braidlie.
V. Robert Elliot, the eldest son, appears in 1546, 1547, 1548, and He succeeded his father before 1557, during which year he is 1553mentioned as eldest, when Martin, his brother, is also referred to. In 1561 he is called of Redheuch, and in 1563 was appointed Captain of the " Hermitage. He married Maiorie Hamiltoun," and had four sons Robert, Gibbie or Gilbert, William in Hartscharth (who married Jane Rutherford, one of the coheiresses of Gawen Elliot of Stobbs), and Archie. Robert Elliot of Redheuch died before 1566. From 1563 down to 1573 we do not hear of an Elliot of Redheuch, the probability being that the Robert who first appears in the latter year had, during that period, been a minor. During these ten years Martin Elliot of Braidlie, the uncle of the minor, led the clan, and under his
—
it became one of the most important on the border. VI. Robert Elliot of Redheuch, first mentioned in 1573. In 15801581 he was directed to give up the Hermitage, of which castle he had been He also appears during the years 1582 to 1608 inclusive, and is captain. believed to have married a daughter of Thomas Carlton of Carlton Hall. Besides Redheuch, Robert Elliot was also in possession or occupation of Larriston.f The date of his death is uncertain he was succeeded by his
leadership
;
son.
VII. Robert Elliot, who was served heir to his father April 20th, 1619, and who married Lady Jane Stewart, daughter of Francis, Earl of Bothwell. By a charter of January 27th, 1637, he settled Lariston on his daughter, Mary, and her husband, James Elliot. In 1624 Robert was accused of conspiring to murder the Earl of Buccleuch. Larriston. The first offshoot from the parent stock was William Elliot of Larriston, supposed to have been the son of Robert
—
Elwold of 1 591, who was grandson of the chief, and who was of Redheuch in 1508-1510. He is mentioned in 1515-16 as of Larriston, and brother The descent of to Robert of Redheuch; he is also mentioned in 1516. In the rent-roll of 1541, the this branch cannot be satisfactorily given. In 1547 we hear of a William of Larriston, lands are not even mentioned. William of and during the same year William of Larriston younger. The probability is, that the first William Larriston again appears in 1548.
was dead in 1556, and the William of Larriston alive, during that and the following year, was his son. In 1565 we again hear of William of Larriston. In 1592 the chief Elliot was of Cariston, but his Christian name was Robert, and he was of Redheuch also. In 1593 there was a William of Larriston, who again appears in 15974 The pedigree of this branch is most confusing. They do not appear *
to
He was probably the Robert Elwald whom the lands of Bluntwood were said to
" the Rent Roll of 1541 as Officer," and in the Rent Roll is not given belong heritably. Redheuch
mentioned
in
of 1541. the map t In the account of the Borders of 1592, the chief Elliot is mentioned as of Canston, and of the same period the name Robert Elliot is given as the occupier of that place. X Could this person not have been the William in Hartscharth, son of Redheuch, and brother to the
m
Redheuch of 1593 and 1597
?
4A
KINGS AND NOBILITY'S ARMS.
276
Robert of Redheuch and to have had charters except from Buccleuch. married Larriston, who Lady Jane Stewart, by a charter, dated January 27th, 1637, settled Larriston on his daughter and her husband. In 1672 there was a Robert Elliot of Larriston his son Robert was served heir in 17 12, sold the estate, and left a son Gilbert, father of William, Colonel in the service of the East India Company, who repur;
—
chased the family estate, and registered arms 1793 ^gules, on a bend or a flute of the first, in sinister chief point a mortar proper crest a dexter arm grasping a spear proper motto " Apto cum lare." Jane, sister and heir of William of Larriston, married John Williams, Esq. of Kensington Gore. Braidlie. The next offshoot from Redheuch was the branch of Braidlie, founded by Martin Elliot, second son of Robert of Redheuch. Martin first appears in 1556, then in 1556-57, and during the same year In 1561 he is called of is referred to as brother of Robert of Redheuch. In Redheuch. 1563 he is mentioned as of Braidlie, by which designation In 1569 he was pledge for he was afterwards generally known. the branch of Redheuch. In 1580 we hear of his sons, Sym,
—
;
—
;
Gawin, Arche, and Hob, and at an earlier period, 1578, of another, William. Martin's son Gawin does not afterwards appear Arche and Hob are again mentioned. In 1586 Martin Elliot and his eldest son, Simon, had a lease of lands from the Earl of Bothwell in 1591 they had a Crown charter of Phillop in Selkirkshire, and Braidlie and Phillop were in the possession of the descendants of Martin about the time of the ;
;
Restoration.
we hear Stobs. Gawen
of Archie, Gib, and Dandie, sons of Martin's brother. Elliot of Stobbis is mentioned from 1584 to i6oo. He married Jane Scott, and was dead in 1607, leaving three coheiresses Esther, married Gilbert Ker of Lochtour, and had issue Dorothy, married George Halyburton of Pinnakill ; and (Jean ?), married
In 1580
—
;
Rutherford, and left a daughter, Jean, who married William Elliot, brother of Robert of Redheuch. She was dead in 162 1, when her son Robert was served heir to her ; he d.s.p., and was succeeded by his brother Francis 1642, ancestor of the Elliots of Dunlabyre. The succession of the Stobbs family is not clear ; Gilbert was of that place in 1622, and in 1628 purchased Middlesteid, Shaws, &c., from Gilbert Ker and Esther Elliot above named. William of Stobbs, and Gilbert, fiar of Stobbs, figure together 1646-54; Gilbert was knighted, and was direct ancestor of the present baronet. The Earls of Minto descend from a younger son of Stobbs. Gawen of Stobbs, in 1592, was tutor to his grandnephew, being preferred to William Elliot, uncle of the boy, till the said William, who was then over twenty-two, should attain the age of twenty-five. William Elliot represented the burgh of Selkirk in parliament in 162 1 and sub-
A
sequently.
HoRSLiEHiLL was a separate branch before the middle of the sixteenth century, and from it descends the family of Bewlie and Borthwickbrae, represented by William Eliott-Lockhart of Borthwickbrae and Cleghorn, Esq. In 1603 William, burgess of Peebles, was served heir of his father, William of Horsliehill there can hardly be a doubt that he is the William who was Provost of Peebles a few years later, and has been said to be a younger son of Stobbs his great-grandson, Sir John, M.D., ;
;
I
KINGS AND NOBILITY'S ARMS.
277
physician to the Prince of Wales, was created a baronet 1778, and had a grant of supporters a bay-horse and a sea-horse, both proper. He died in 1786, leaving an only child, Ann of Peebles, who left issue bearing her
—
surname. " In 1541 Archibald Ellott was designed "in Gorrenberrie in had a 161 1 and Crown in William he 1556 charter; acquired Falnesche, Ellott of Falnesche having acquired Arkleton, had a Crown charter. Falnesche remained with his descendants till the time of Archibald, 1675, Adam of Meikledale, a cadet of the Unthank family, acquired Arkleton, which was entailed in 1694 by Walter Elliot, who had registered arms 1676, with the bend indented for difference. The present William Scott-Elliot of Arkleton, W.S., is heir of entail. Scott of Satchels states, that Adam of Meikledale was descended from the former owners of Arkleton of the same name. ;
VIII.
ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT, A. D.
1603-5,
ASCRIBED TO
SIR DAVID LINDSAY, LYON KING OF ARMS.
4B
Sir David Lindesay of the Movnt, Knicht, Lord Lyon King of Armes. L. no mullets in chief, no crest or motto a crown, intended for that of his office, rests on the wreath supporters a female and a male figure vested and winged. Arms of Scotland. L. the banner held by the dexter supporter is fringed azure, and has the arms of Scotland that held by the sinister is and and a coronet or surmounts the cross azure, supporter fringed argent of St Andrews. The lion of the crest holds a sceptre in his sinister paw. Anna Regina. Scotland impaling Denmark. Achievement of James L of England, first and fourth, France quartering England second, Scotland third, Ireland. Crest of Scotland " as before mottoes on either side of it Die est mon droyt" " In defence;" supporters the lion of England crowned, gorged, and chained, and the unicorn of Scotland gorged and chained. The shield encircled with the garter, with the motto of the order thereon, and pendant therefrom an oval badge argent, a cross gules, and with the collar of the thistle, and pendant therefrom an oval badge azure a saltire argent. On either side of the crest a banner that on the dexter, azure, a portcullis crowned that on the sinister, argent, a rose crowned. Henry Frederick, Prince. Scotland with a label of three points ;
;
;
—
;
;
—
;
;
;
—
—
—
;
azure.
DvKE OF Lenoxe.
Opposite the achievement
is
a
shield
of
Stewart, and below it Followis the names of the present King oure Soverane Lord, and the Nobles of the name of Steuart w'in Scotland. After the King and Duke, are the Earls of Athole, Orkney, and Murray, Lords Innermeath and Ochiltree, Sheriff of Bute, Lairds of Rossyth, Garlics, Traquair, Grand-
Minto, Prior of Blantyre, Lairds of Craigiehall, Castlemilk, Fintilloch, Bastoun, ArnetuUie. tully, Ballechin,,
Lord Marqves of Hammiltovn.
The list gives Sir James of Laird of Abbot of Evindale, Innerwick, Paisley, Lairds of Silvertonhill, Preston, Dunry, Sorn, Samuelston, Bathgate, Pardovan, Kynnaldie, Peill of Livingstone. Lord Marqves OF HuNTLiE. No tressure in the Seton coat. The lairds are Lochinvar, Stradoun,
Auchindown, Gight, Pitlurg, Largmoir, Carnburro, Newton, Buckie, Cluny, Abergeldie, Craig of Auchindoir, Troquhane, Barskeoch, Airds, Schirmes, the Cule.
Earle of Angusse.
The Douglas
heart
is
uncrowned
;
the piles
The cross embattled in the third quarter are vert, and five in number. of Auchinleck in base. The list of Douglases is divided into three first, those " quha are come of the hous of Angus," being the lairds of Glen" descendet of secohd, bervie, Maynes, Spot, Pendreich, and Kilspindie the Erie of Mortonnis hous," lairds of Lochleven, Whittingham, Grange, " Melrose, Kirkness, and Douglas of Kennestoun third, those quha are come of the verie hous of Douglas," being the lairds of Drumlanrig, Pumpherston, Coshogill, Provost of Lincluden, lairds of Pennieland, Tulliquhillie, Dalvene. :
;
;
LINDSA Y II.
282
The Campbell
Earle of Argyle.
—a boar's
gyronny of eight or and with blood gushing from the
coat
is
head couped sable, crest neck proper. His cadets are the Lord of Loudoun, lairds of Lundie, Glenorchy, Ardkinglas, Caddell, Auchin (breck), Lochhow (?), Lawers, Glenlyon, Schankistoun. Earle of Mar. The younger branches are Lord of Somervell, laird of Dun, Abbots of Dryburgh and Cambuskenneth, laird of Balgony. The Lord of Somervell was his lordship's son James, afterwards Earl of Buchan, who was contracted in marriage to Mary, eldest daughter and coheir of Gilbert Lord Somerville, who agreed to resign to them the title and estate, retaining his own liferent. The marriage did not take place, but the Somerville estates, which were heavily burdened, were sold to the Earl of Mar. sable
;
Earle of Atholl. Earle of Crawfurde.
The Abernethy coat, without the ribbon, the first and Names of the noblemen and fourth occupies quarters. barones of the surname of Lyndsay within Scotland Erie of Crawfurd. :
—
Lord Lyndsay. Lord Spyne. Lairds of Edzell, Covingtoun, Kinfaunis, Dunrod, Month, Dowhill, Vaine, Kirkforther, Balcarres, Barcloy, Barnyaird, Wodvray, Cuilier. Earle of Erroll the supporters are two ox-yokes resting on the ;
shield.
Lord of Yester,
lairds of Delgaty, Leys, Urie,
Meginch, Muchals,
Futhie, Gourdie, Smithfield, Talay, and Sandford. Earle Marshal. The chief is paly of six or and gules. Lairds of Benholm, Canterland, Craig, Ackelgill, Scheill, Troup, Harthill.
Earle of Orkney. Earle of Murray. Moray
;
second, Randolph, Earl of First, Scotland third, Stewart, with a label of three points gules ; fourth, gules, a ;
lion
rampant or. Earle of Rothess. The second and third quarters argent, a lion rampant sable armed and langued gules crest the head and bust of an
—
—
;
angel full-faced vested azure. Lord Lindores, lairds of Leslie, Balquhain, Pitcaple, Parkhill, Innerdovat, Otterstoun. Earle of Morton. Douglas of Morton quartering Douglas of Lochleven. Earle of Montrose. The paternal coat in the second and third quarters.
Lairds of Fintrie, Morphy, Inchbracky, Balgowan, Braco, Orchill, Knockdolian, Claverhouse. Earle of Cassills. The chevron azure. Lairds of Bargany, Blaquhan, the Cove, Girvanmains, Skeldon, Knockdaw, Branestoun, Tornagannoch.
Earle of Glencairne.
Lairds of Cunynghamhead, Glengarnock, Caprington, Drumquhassill, Barns, Aiket, Robertland, Tourlands, Polmaise, Lagland, Cesnok, Kirkshaw.
LINDSAY 11. Earle of Eglington.
283
; with a double tressure flowered counterflowered argent. Lairds of Langschaw, Skelmorlie, Braidstane, Clonbeith.
L.
Earle of Cathnes.
Lord of Sinclare, lairds of Roslin, May, Herdmanstoun, Blanse^ Auchinfrank. Follouis the Lordis of Parliament. Lord Hoome. Crest a lion's head gules issuing from the wreath. Lairds of Coldingknowes, Wedderburn, Aytoun, Blacader, Huttonhall, Polwarth, Manderston, Greenlaw, Broxmouth, North Berwick. Lord Fleming, First and fourth, or, a chevron within a double tressure gules second and third, azure, six fraises argent. Lairds of Boghall and Blaklaw. Lord Maxwell. Argent, a saltire sable, three pellets in chief and
—
;
flank.
Lord Herries,
lairds of Newark, Nether Pollock, Tealing, Cowhill, the Hill, the Logane, Drumcoltrane, Portrack, Tinwald, Conheath, the Isle, Carnsalloch.
Lord Lindesay. Lord Innermeth. Lord Yester. Supporters
—two savages surrounded by and so that bodies above the waist only are Lord Drummond. Crest—a dog's head sable issuing from the trees
their
foliage,
visible.
The
dexter supporter holds a hound in leish, and another is couchant behind the legs of the sinister supporter. Abbot of Inchafiray, lairds of Carnock, Bordland, Blair, Innerpeffry,
wreath.
Abernethie, Balloch, Colquhalzie, Pitkellony.
Lord Olyphant.
Lairds of Berridale, Gagie
Lord Ogilvy.
(?
Gask), Newton, WilHamston, Bachilton.
The
lion placed on a mount vert and charged on the breast with an escutcheon azure, a star of six points or but the family shield on the opposite leaf has the lion alone ; crest a portcullis.
—
;
;
Lairds of Powrie, Finlater, Banff", Boyne, Innerquharitie, Balfour, Inchmartine, Clova, Craig, Westcraigie, Innerkelour, Lawtoun. Lord Glammes. The tressure is sable in the shield opposite. Crest the bust of a lady placed on what looks like an oval mirror, with a frame
—
''
x^^xt's>tr\\\xv
In Domino
confido."
Lairds of Auldbar, Kingoldrum, Cossines.
Lord Boyd.
Lairds of Banheath, Kippis, Bonschaw, Penkill, the Throchrig.
Lord Sanquhair. Lairds of Frendraught, Brunstoun, Innernytie, Ruthven, Cluny, Carse, Liberie, Camnay, Nauchtane. Lord Vcheltrie. First, Scotland second, Stewart, with a label of three points gules fourth, or, a lion third, Lennox, the saltire engrailed rampant gules for the Earldom of Fife crest a wyvern's head. It is to be observed that there is no bordure compony here, and in an illuminated MS., of about 1570, in the Lyon Office, although the arms of Lord Ouchiltre have the bordure compony, this is corrected on the " opposite side in a pen and ink sketch of the sigillum Andrese Steuart, Lord Ocheltry, the armes without ye bordure." In a very interesting volume, printed for private circulation 1854 by the Hon. and Rev. Andrew ;
;
;
4C
—
;
LINDSAY 11
284
.
Godfrey Stuart, he argues and makes a strong case for the descent of the families of Evandale, Ochiltree, and Castlestuart from a legitimate son of Walter, eldest surviving son of Murdoch, Duke of Albany, and not from an illegitimate son of James the gross, youngest son of the Duke, which is the account usually given. Lord Forbes. Supporters a savage and a hound. Lairds of Tolquhoun, Brux, Pitsligo, Rires, Towie, Corsindae, Monymusk, Balfliug, Auchinhofe, Cushnie. Lord Herries.
—
Lord Elphinston. Lairds of Henderstoun, Barntoun, Sellem (Selmys), Schank. "
—
Lord Synclair. Motto Lord Salton. Opposite
Faith." are the arms of " Abernethie of auld
"
without the ribbon.
Lord Sempill.
Field or. Lairds of Beltrees and Cathcart.
Lord Gray. Lairds of Duninald, Grange, Ballegarno. Motto " Feir God in love." Lairds of Cambusnethan and Plane. Lord of Ross. Melville in the first and fourth quarters. Lairds of Kilravock, Craigie, Balnagowan.
—
Lord Somervell.
Lord Borthvik.
Lairds of Balhouffie and Newbyres.
Lord Lovat. Lairds of Philorth, Durris, Overtoun. Lord Cathcart. Crest a parrot perched on a round ball motto " Humilitate." Laird of Carleton. Mackcloyde, Lord of the Lewys. W. ; the mount issues from the
—
;
—
base.
*Macleane. Gilleon ni tuoidh, who] is said to have fought at the battle of Largs, is supposed to have been father of Gillemoie Makilyn, who in 1296 swore fealty to Edward L Some authentic notices of the Macleans are given in the " Origines Parochiales," and a genealogy of the clan Maclean, published in 1838, contains a detailed account of many of its branches the early part of the genealogy seems hardly reconcilable with the dates. Several branches held their lands in free barony of the Crown, and contested the chiefship, but the unfortunate neglect of the registration of arms by the members of this family, leaves us without a decision as to their armorial rights. In 1803 Alexander Maclean of Coll, registered arms nearly resembling those here given, without any mark of cadency, and with supporters a greyhound proper collared and leashed gules, and an ostrich proper with a horse-shoe in its beak azure. Nisbet gives the supporters of Sir Hector Maclean, baronet, chief of his clan, as two seals proper standing on a compartment representing green land and sea. Lachlan M'Leane of Morvaren had a precept for a patent of baronetcy, 3rd September 1631, and a grant of land in Nova Scotia on the same day from Sir William Alexander, but no patent is entered in the Great Seal Register. The supporters latterly borne by the baronets are ;
—
LINDSAY 11.
285
two ostriches as already blazoned. John, younger brother of the first baronet, went to Sweden 1639, was employed in a diplomatic capacity by Charles II., who is said to have conferred a baronetcy on him in 1650; he was recognized as noble in his adopted country under the name of Makeleer, with an alteration of arms. In 1708 his son, General David Maclean, was created a baron this title expired 1816, on the death of Baron Roger Maclean, minister of state to Charles XIII. Maitland, as L. Lord Thirlestane, lairds of Lethingtoun, Auchin;
;
cassill.
laird of Dunnivege and Glennes. of the Lord of the Isles are in L., and the armorial of le Bouvier gives those of one of the later lords. The seals of Ranald, son of Somerled, and of Angus, son of Donald, a.d. 1292, have a ship filled with armed men; that of Alexander, son of Angus, has the lymphad only, and another the lymphad with two men. The arms of Randal, first Earl of Antrim, cut on a stone in a wall built by him in 1625, to enclose the well of St Bridget, co. Roscommon, are a lymphad quartering a dolphin (? salmon) naiant. In 1677 Ronald, Marquess of Antrim, registered in the books of the Lyon Court the following first, argent, a lion rampant gules holding in his dexter paw a thistle slipped or second, azure, a dexter hand couped at the wrist fessways argent, holding a cross crosslet fitchde paleways gules third, or, in the sea proper a lymphad oars in saltire sable ; fourth, parted per fess wavy argent and vert, a salmon naiant proper crest a hand erect closed proper motto "Vis conjuncta fortior ;" supporters a savage wreathed about the head and middle with laurel, and a falcon proper armed jessed and belled or. In 1873 the Rev. George Hill published, at Belfast, "An Historical Account of the Macdonnells of
*Mackoneil,
The arms
—
;
— —
;
—
;
;
Antrim."
The arms of Macdonald of Moydart, Captain of Clanranald, are given among the coats taken from the Lyon Register. In Mr Laing's collection are two interesting seals appended to a deed in 1572, by John Murdodach
—
a tree M'Allister, Captain of Clanronald, and his eldest son Allan eradicated between a sinister hand fessways couped at the wrist turned towards the tree on the dexter, and a lymphad with no sails or oars, a flag at the masthead, on the sinister. In 1810 Reginald George Macdonald of Clanranald, Captain and Chief of Clanranald, obtained a grant of supporters two bears, each pierced through the body with two arrows in saltire points downwards proper; the arms were those recorded by his ancestor, 1672-78, but the crest, a castle proper, is altered to a triple towered castle argent masoned sable, and issuing from the centre tower a dexter arm in armour embowed " My hope is grasping a sword, all proper. In addition to the old motto, " constant in thee," another is placed below the shield Dhandeon co
—
—
heiragha." The pretentions of this gentleman led to the well-known controversy In 1797 in which Mr John Riddell took part on the side of Glengarry. Alexander M'Donell of Glengarry, had registered the older coat, nearly as given from Workman, borne by the Lords of the Isles, and by yEneas Lord M'Donell and Arross or, an eagle displayed gules surmounted of a lymphad sable, sails furled and rigging proper, in dexter chief a dexter hand couped in fess of the second, and in sinister chief a cross crosslet
—
-
LINDSAY IL —a raven proper perched on a rock azure — Cragan an fhithich supporters— two bears
2 86
fitch^e of the third ; crest " motto above the crest
';
;"
each pierced through the body by an arrow proper; motto below the In 1870 these bearings were again ''Per mare per terras!' shield recorded by the present representative of the family, ^neas Ranald Westrop M'Donell, Esq. In an old representation of the arms the bears are white and blood flows from the wounds, the hand is erect, and there
—
is
no cross
crosslet.
coat of Macdonald of Slate, now Lord Macdonald, is given iri the MS. of Stacie, Ross Herald 1663-87: first, argent, a lion rampant gules armed or ; second, azure, a hand proper holding a cross patde of calvary sable third, vert, a ship ermine her oars in saltire sable in water proper fourth, parted per fess wavy vert and argent, a salmon naiant ;
The
;
— a hand holding a dagger proper; ;
crest
motto
—
"
My
hope
is
supporters
—two leopards
proper-,
constant in thee."
of Ceremonies, Sir James Bellenden, Baron of Brochton. L. the buck's head is erased crest a buck's head erased motto " Justice, peace," or, with a pheon azure between the attires supported by two female figures representing peace and justice. In 1668 these arms were confirmed by Lyon to William Lord Bellenden of Broughton, the buck's " head being couped, the Royal tressure being Sic itur ad astral The seal, 1604, of James of added, and the motto Broughton, gives the arms as L. crest a thistle, and the supporters. The Earl of Buchan represents the family. ScRiMGEOUR OF DuDHOPE. Arms of John with supporters, and again impaling those of his wife, Magdalene Livingstone. Campbell of Glenorchy. Gyronny of eight argent and sable in the first and fourth quarters. bend or surmounts the three boars' Gordon of Lochinvar.
The Lord
;
—
;
;
—
—
—
;
A
heads.
Charteris of Kinfauns, has the tressure. Carnegie of Kinnaird, has the cup on the breast of the eagle. Irvine of Drum. Three holly leaves. *Craufurd of Lefnoreis. The seal, 1587, of William of L., has three stags' heads erased. George of L. sat in parliament 1560-72. The estate was sold about 1630, after being for many generations in this family.
a
*Hepburn of Waughton.
curious variation of the arms of this married Andrew Ramsay of Abbotshall, heiress of which Sir line, the baronet. He recorded his own and his wife's arms in 1672, the latter being Hepburn quartered with argent, three martlets gules, probably for
Gourlay.
Hepburn of Smeaton at one time bore the chevron of his paternal coat between three martlets argent. Mr Laing gives a seal of Patrick of Waughton without date first and fourth, Hepburn second, a (cross ?) the description does not seem exact engrailed third, Rutherford (?) an antelope's head. The barons of Waughton and Luffness were crest a powerful family, and have been said to be older than the house of Bothwell. The successive heads sat in parliament from 1483 almost Sir Patrick was a Privy Councillor to Charles I. regularly till 1651. Cunvnghame of Cunynghamehead. pall sable between a mullet in chief gules and two garbs in flank azure.
—
—
;
;
;
;
a
LINDSAY 11.
287
*HOME OF WeDDERBURN. *Erskene of Gogar. He was
afterwards Viscount Fenton, and the crown and tressure refer to his services to James VI. at the time of the
Gowrie
plot.
LuNDiE OF THAT Ilk. Gules, fivc pallets or a bend, &c. Douglas of Drumlanrig. The heart is not crowned. KiRKPATRiCK OF Closeburn. The field is or. Ker of Fernihirst. The three mullets on the chevron
are azure,
a stag's head erased or in base. Menzies of Weem. Field ermine.
*Blair of Balthayock.
The
James de
Provost of Dundee, 1462, and of Alexander Blar of Balthayock, 1491, have a chevron between three roundles. Stephen de Blar, son of Vallenus, granted a charter of the lands of seals of
Blair,
Letcassy to the monks of Cupar in the reign of William the Lyon. In 1296 David de Blare, of the county of Perth, did homage to Edward I. Balthayock was in the possession of the family from 1370 till its recent sale. Thomas of Balthayock sat in parliament 1471-84, and another Thomas 1560. Persons of the name represented the burgh of Perth 1513 and 1597, ^"^^ many cadets of Balthayock formed separate families. Sir Alexander of Balthayock registered arms, 1672-78 argent, a chevron sable between three torteaux. David II. grants Ardlere and Baldowry, in the fortieth year of his reign, to John de Ardlere and the heirs of his body on his own resignaalso a charter of East tion, whom failing to his brother Patrick de Blare
—
;
Maler to
Hew
Blair.
Ilk. The man is not entirely naked in this but a pair of short white drawers his body is guttd wears representation, de sang, his hair stands on end, the arms are elevated, and the whole attitude and expression denote fear.
Dalzell of that
;
Haldane of Gleneagles. Stirling of Keir. buckles
The Lennox
saltire is engrailed.
Argent, on a bend engrailed
sable
three
or.
TuRNBULL of Bedrule.
Argent, a bull's head erased sable horned
azure, blood flowing from the neck.
Grant of that Ilk. Logan of Restalrig.
Azure, three antique crowns or lined gules. First and fourth, argent, an eagle displayed
second and third, or, three piles sable. Innes of that Ilk. First and fourth, gules, three bears' heads couped or second and third, argent, three mullets azure. Dunbar of Mochrum. The lion and bordure with eight roses. Patrick of Dunbar, Earl of March (ninth Earl), appears first on the " " list of the six Magnates of Scotland who sealed the guarantee for the ransom of King David II. The document, dated Berwick-on-Tweed, 5th October 1357, has appended to it an impression of the Earl's seal. Couchd, a lion rampant within a bordure charged with eleven roses crest on a helmet, a horse's head bridled issuing from a coronet showing three long and two short points supporters two men vested, visible to the waist, each having a long feather in his cs.-^.— Communicated by A. H. Dunbar, Esq. *Mackenzie of Kintayle. The seals of Colin of Kintail 1585, sable
;
;
—
;
—
;
4D
LINDSAY II.
288
Kenneth of Kintail 1597, and Sir Roderick of Coigeach 1624, all have the stag's head cabossed, with a mullet between the attires. When Kenneth above named was created a peer in 1609, the arms were azure, a stag's head cabossed or attired with ten tynes argent " Luceo a mount azure with fire issuing therefrom proper motto crest " collared deerhounds two non uro Kenneth, argent gules. supporters third Earl of Seaforth, registered arms 1672-78, when the supporters were two savages wreathed about the head and middle, holding in their exterior hands batons burning at the end and resting on their shoulders,
— —
—
;
;
—
;
—
their hair likewise inflamed all proper.
In 181 7 these arms and supporters were allowed to George Falconer Mackenzie of Allangrange, the heir-male; and the Hon. Lady HoodMackenzie of Seaforth, 18 15, registered arms, her supporters being a greyhound proper collared gules, pendant from the collar a badge or charged with a buck's head cabossed, and a savage as above. The history of the family has recently been illustrated in " The Earls of Cromartie," by William Eraser, printed for private circulation, 1876; " Genealogical Tables of the Clan Mackenzie," by Major Mackenzie of " Findon, 1879 and History of the Clan Mackenzie," by Alexander ;
Mackenzie, 1879. Conflicting accounts have been given of the origin of the family, and there is little evidence of their early pedigree the oldest Crown charter recorded is dated 1509, and confirms Kintail and other lands to John Mak;
kenzie, erecting them into the barony of Eleandonan. Kenneth of Kintail sat in parliament 1596-98.
*Ross OF Balnagowan. Balnagowan was granted by William, Earl of Ross, before 1370, to his brother Hugh, with whose descendants it remained till the death This gentleman s.p., in 171 1, of David Ross. left the estate, which had been erected into a in 161 5, away from barony his right heirs. He seems to have had a passion for executing legal documents, as he not only made three different deeds of entail, but arranged to execute a resignation of his pretensions to the Earldom of Ross in favour of William Lord Ross of Hawkhead, who hoped to obtain a re-grant from the Crown. Balnagowan had two sisters— Isabel, who married Innes of Lightnet, and Katherine, wife of John Mackenzie of Malcolm Ross of Pitcalnie became
heir male, and his the present representative. Two savages were borne as supporters. The seal of Hugh of Rarichies, afterwards of Balnagowan, in 1351, at which time his elder brother was alive, has a mullet in base as a mark of difference, and what Mr Laing describes as a bordure charged with eleven escallops or ermine spots ; perhaps this is the tressure which was borne by several of the Earls of Ross. MoNCUR OF THAT Ilk. Argent, a rose proper, on a chief azure three
Inverlawell;
descendant
is
escutcheons
or.
Barclay of Cullernie.
Azure, a
chevron
or
between three
crosses patde argent.
Fotheringham of Powrie.
Barry of eight argent and
vert,
a
bordure gules.
Halkett of Pitfirrane.
The
three piles sable issue from the
base.
*Vaus of Barnbarroch. 1240,
is
The seal of Sir William de Waus, c. a that of Robert Vaus, in 1500, a bend, and in ermine, bend;
LINDSAY IL sinister chief
289
a lozenge; Janet Vaus, in 1569, uses the three stars as here
given.
John de Vallibus lived in the reign of William the Lyon. Sir John de Vaus swore fealty to Edward I. 1 291, as did John de Vaus, of the county of Edinburgh, five years later. Alexander was Bishop of Galloway 1422-44, and George held the same see 1489- 1505. Robert Vaus had a charter of Barnbarroch in 1451 from William, Earl of Douglas the lands were erected into a barony 1 59 1, and remain in the possession of the family, who have latterly borne the plain coat argent, a bend gules, with two savages as supporters, but have never registered arms. The coat cut in stone c. 1500 at Whithorn is said to be a bend with no other charge (?). Sir Patrick of Barnbarroch was a senator of the College of Justice 1576, a member of the Secret Council, and ambassador to Denmark. Kyninmonth of Craighall. The chevron is or. Dunbar of Cumnock. The cushions and tressure. *Arbuthnott of that Ilk. These would appear to be the bearings of Sir Robert, composed with the three passion nails of Wishart, his first ;
—
wife being a daughter of that family.
Douglas of Glenbervie. The plain coat with no crown. * Ramsay of Kirknewton. *Herries of Cousland. This and the preceding, with their showy augmentations, date from the period of the Gowrie
*Edmonstone of Duntreath.
plot. seal of Sir William, in 1470, tressure ; at a later period the
The
has these bearings within the Royal annulet was dropped. Two lions are the supporters, and a horse's (?) head The crest issuing from a coronet the crest, on the seal above-mentioned. now borne is a swan's head issuing from a coronet, with the former supporters, but these arms are not registered they appear as early as 1507, on the seal of Sir William of Duntreath. A genealogical account of the family was printed for private circula;
tion in 1875, and there was also published, at Berwick 1790, and again in Edinburgh 1834, a short notice of the Edmonstones of Ednam, &c. The Ednam family bore or, three crescents gules ; crest a camel's head supporters two camels a later crest was a globe surmounted of a cross. John Edmonstone of that Ilk, co. Edinburgh, had a charter of Ednam 1390; his representative. Sir John, sold Edmonstone 1626; Ednam remained with his descendants for four generations, and the representation passed, in 1826, to the descendants of the marriage, in 1766, of Isobel Edmonstone to William, younger son of Aytoun of Inchdairnie. ;
—
—
—
;
Henry de Edmonstone, c. 1250, was probably son of Edmund, who gave his name to his lands William of that Ilk sat in parliament 1483, ;
and John in 1560; the family were heritable coroners of Lothian. Sir William of a younger branch married Mary, daughter of Robert III., and had the lands of Duntreath, which were erected into a barony in his favour 1452. William of Duntreath sat in parliament 1478, and Archibald 1488.
Both well of Furd. A mullet gules on the chevron. MouBRAY OF Barnbougal. A bordurc engrailed argent. Hamilton of Innerwick. Gules, a fess checquy argent and
azure
LINDSA Y IL
290 fracted,
between three cinquefoils of the second, in middle chief point a
round buckle proper. •Monro of Foules. The eagle's head is erased on the seal of Robert Munro, vicar of Urquhart 1579. Sir James Balfour gives for Monro of Balkney vert, an eagle displayed argent armed gules. Porteus a lion's (? eagle's) head erased or gives for Monro of Foulis gules, Stacie has for Sir George Monro erased aliter, or, an eagle's head gules. but Sir George gules, an eagle sitting on a helmet proper (of Culrain) Mackenzie gives the arms of Foulis as or, an eagle perching on a helmet embattled of the second for Sir George, who gules, and adds a bordure
—
—
;
—
—
;
was a younger son. The Lyon Register, 1672-78, shows that or, an eagle's head erased arms of the name that coat is gules, had at that time become the settled recorded with differences for several cadets, and for the chief, with two ;
eagles proper as supporters, Robert of Monro had a charter from Robert I., of Counetis, in Strathspey, and of the lands of Capermakcultis. Robert of Monro lived about the middle of the fourteenth century, and in 1437 George first has the designation of Foulis. The family were vassals of the Earls of Ross at first. Robert of Foulis sat in
parliament 1560-72.
Urquhart of Cromarty.
Azure, a chevron argent between three
boars' heads erased or.
Forman of Priorletham. erased or campaned argent three fishes haurient argent.
MoNCUR
(?).
Name
three escutcheons of the
;
First and fourth, sable, a camel's head
second and third, azure, a chevron between
not given
;
argent, a rose gules,
on a chief azure
field.
Name not given azure, a lion rampant argent (?). a within bordure of the second charged with eight buckles of the first. Makeleun of that Ilk. Gules, a lion rampant between three mullets argent. OcHTERLONY
;
Lyle of Stanypeth. Azure, fretty or. Otterburn of Redhall. The chevron is vert and the chief gules. Rutherford of Hundeley. The principal charge is rather an inescutcheon gules charged with another or than an orle. KiRKALDY OF Grange. Or, two mullets in chief gules, and a crescent azure in base. Hoppringle of Galashiels. Argent, on a bend azure three escallops or.
•Burnett of Leys.
This singular coat has already been noticed given with different tinctures for Burnett in
under W., where it is Tweeddale. Mr William Burnett of Barns, of old of Burnetland in that county, and at registered, 1672-78 argent, three holly leaves vert, a chief azure the same time Sir Thomas of Leys, baronet, recorded ^argent, three holly leaves in chief vert and a hunting-horn in base sable, garnished
—
—
;
and stringed gules. These bearings are cut in stone at Crathes, c. 1550; and at Muchals, built by Andrew Burnett of Leys, and his son Sir
—
baronet, 1619-27, the same appear, with supporters a man in a hunting garb, and a greyhound. The supporters were not recorded by Sir Thomas, but in 1838 another entry was made by Sir
Thomas, the
first
LINDSAY IL
291
Thomas, then of Leys, when they were blazoned a Highlander in a hunting-garb holding in his exterior hand a bow, and a greyhound, all proper. Sir James Balfour gives the arms of Leys, putting the horn between the three holly leaves, and Porteus gives the coat registered by Barns for Burnet of Burnettsland of old
also for Burnett of old
—argent,
three leaves vert. holly In Domesday Book, Burnard is named as holding lands in Alriceseie in Bedfordshire, and elsewhere, as a mesne tenant of William de Ow. seal of Odo Burnard, attached to a charter relating to Arlesey, c. 1200, has a leaf, or perhaps rather a flower composed of seven leaves, on a short stalk another seal of the same person, a little later, has three leaves on a shield. The leaves have been called burnet (pimpernel) leaves, but all the Scottish blazons have holly. One leaf appears on the seal, 1252, of Richard Burnard of Faringdon, in Roxburghshire. Faringdon remained in the possession of the Burnards for several generations. Alexander Burnard had charters, from Robert L, of lands in the forest of Drum and the barony of Tulliboyll, and thus founded the family in the north of which Sir Robert Burnett of Leys, baronet, is heir male. Leys was erected into a barony in 1607. Gilbert, Bishop of Salisbury 1689-17 15, and Robert of Crimond, a Senator of the College of Justice 1661, belonged to a younger branch of ;
A
;
this line.
Alexander Burnett of Craigour and Tillihackie, an early cadet of Leys, about the middle of the sixteenth century acquired the estate of Craigmyle, by marriage with the heiress of Craigmyle of that Ilk. Their grand-daughter and heir married James Burnett, immediate younger brother of the first baronet of Leys and the descendants of this marriage, the Burnetts of Kenmay (of which family the present Lyon King of Arms is a younger brother) have since quartered azure, two garbs in chief and a crescent in base or, for Craigmyle. The crest borne by the families of Leys and Barns may, perhaps, be founded on the bearing of the man hewing the tree it is a dexter hand " Virescit vulnere with a knife pruning a vine-tree proper; motto ;
—
— ;
virtus y
There can be no doubt, from the identity of name and arms, that the Burnards, lords of Faringdon, or Farningdon, now Fairnington, co. Roxburgh, were founded by an immigrant from England. In the reigri of William the Lyon, c. 1200, Roger made two grants to the monks of Melrose from his lands of Faringdon, one of them being witnessed by his four About 1200 Gaufridus Bursons, Gaufrid, Ralph, Walter, and Richard. nald is named a little later Ralph, designed son and heir of Roger Burnard of Faringdon, makes a grant to the church of Glasgow Walter Burnett, in the reign of William, witnessed a charter of Stephen de Blar About 1250 to the monks of Cupar; Richard of Faringdon, 1252. and in Patrick Burnard held lands near Gordon, in Berwickshire of In a servant the is Burnet called 1292 Roger 1264 Henry Justiciary. Burnard was dead, leaving a son and heir a minor John Burnart in the John Burnard of Faringdon, c. 1335-1360. In 1296 reign of Robert I. Williame de Farningdon of Roxburghshire swore fealty to Edward I.', perhaps a member of the Burnard family. In 1368 John Burnard was wounded at Lyddell, and died in Roxburgh Castle, when his lands of Ardross in Fife, and Currie in Mid;
;
;
;
;
4E
LINDSA Y
292
II.
Lothian, were forfeited, but after a time were restored to his cousin and heir, William Dishington. The early settlers in the north certainly were Burnards besides the direct line, seated at or near Leys, there were, in the reign of David IL, John Burnard, macer to the king, and William Burnard the former had an interest in the lands of Carnousie in Banffshire, the latter in those of ;
;
Kinnaber
in Forfarshire.
The Burnetts
of Barns have claimed descent from the de Burneville, but this claim hardly seems proved. From 1116, when John de Burneville was on an inquest as to lands belonging to the see of Glasgow, there are frequent notices of persons of the name, and to a charter of David, son of King Malcolm, to the monks of Kelso, Robert de Burnetuilla was a witness, 11 19-24; this is the only instance in which the letter / is inserted.
On
the other hand, the Burnetts in Tweeddale certainly sometimes " William as Brenarde of Burnards, and as late as 1585 we find appear the Barnis." It seems not unlikely that from the Burnevilles may have derived the Burnefields, who, in the fifteenth century, were vassals of the Bishops of Glasgow, and in the sixteenth were a numerous clan in the Merse.
Rodbert de Burneville, 1 124-53 Robert de Burneville was a hostage 174; John de B. was dead c. 1230, when there was a suit as to his widow's Robert de B., and his terce from the lands of Kerinton, co. Edinburgh son Robert, witnessed a charter of Patrick, Earl of Dunbar, before 1233; 1296, lands in the shires of Edinburgh, Berwick, and Roxburgh were restored to Agnes, widow of John de B., who had died about twenty years before in 1324 James Burnart held lands near Berwick-on-Tweed, and William de Burneton (? Burnevilla) was mayor of the burgh 1333-6. Nisbet quotes a mortification by John Burnett of that Ilk, 1400, to the chaplainry of the altar of the Holy Rood in the church of St Gordian at Manor, close to Barns John of Burnetland had a charter 1405 John of Burnetland was on an assize 1484, and was dead in 1500, when his widow had terce from Barns and half of Burnetland his grandson and ;
1
;
;
;
;
;
John, then in minority, was afterwards designed of Barns. Burnetland is in the parish of Broughton, about six miles from Barns. William of Barns, nicknamed " the Howlet," was a conspicuous member of the family, lived to a great age, and by his wife, Margaret, daughter of James Stewart of Traquair, aunt of John, Earl of Traquair, Lord High Commissioner and Treasurer, left a numerous family at his death in 1645. Among his junior descendants were the Burnetts of Carlops, of whom Archibald took part in the rising of 17 15, and was executed the Burnetts of Little Ormiston the Burnetts of Cringaltie and Alexander, Bishop of Aberdeen 1663, Archbishop of Glasgow 1664, died 1684. His Grace registered arms, adding a cross patde gules in the centre of " the shield, and taking for motto Non est mortale quod optoT His and coheirs were Anne, married, first, Alexander Lord Elphindaughters stone, who died 1669 s.p.; secondly, Patrick Lord Elibank, and had issue. Mary, married Roderick Mackenzie of Prestonhall, a Senator of the College of Justice, brother of the first Earl of Cromartie; her son, Alexander, married ^Emilia, daughter and heir of Hugh Lord Lovat, and took the designation of Eraser of Fraserdale. heir,
;
;
;
—
:
LINDSAY IL
293
Captain James Burnett of Barns sold the estates, and died in 1855 Hay Lodge, Peebles, now represents ;
his eldest son, William, resident at
the family. The intermarriages of the Barns family have been Caverhill of that Ilk, Naesmith of Posso, Inglis of Murdostoun, Veitch of Dawick, Scott of Bonington (an heiress). Chancellor of Shieldhill, &c. In Funeral Escutcheons, the arms, as borne before 1672, are given without the chief for Burnett of Barns. Maxwell of Tealing. Ermine, a saltire sable.
Wallace of Ellerslie.
Azure, a lion rampant argent Gules, three bears' head couped or
Galbraith of Culcreuch. muzzled
vert.
FuLLERTON OF Dreghorn.
Of, a fess azure between three otters'
heads couped gules.
Arms
•LicHTOUN OF Ullisheaven.
registered 1672-78 by Robert colonel in the the service of King of Sweden, son of the Lyghtone, deceased John of Ulissishaven, lieutenant-colonel in the same service
and langued azure
argent, a lion rampant gules armed " vert motto Per adversa virtus
—
;
;
crest
T
—a palm
—
tree
Another crest was a lion's head, with the motto, " Light on." Seal of John Lichton of Ullsheiven, 1572 a lion rampant the same charge is on the seal of Sir Robert Leghtoun 1536. The seals, 1666 and 1673, of Robert Leigh ton. Bishop of Dunblane, afterwards Archbishop of Glasgow, are a lion rampant, with a lion's head erased as crest. The lion appears to have been sometimes salient, if not passant. Sir James Balfour has ^gules, a lion salient argent Pont has two blazons argent, a lion rampant gules armed or argent, a lion passant
—
;
—
—
;
:
;
gardant gules. Porteus has
—argent, a Sir Patrick Hume gives —
rampant vert armed and langued gules. a lion passant argent. ^gules, Colonel Robert, who registered arms, was left an orphan in infancy by the death of his father in action before Witstock in 1633 he rose to be general in the service of the King of Sweden, Governor of Esthonia, a^ Privy Councillor, and was created Count of UUishaven 1687. Count Lyghtone d.s.p. October 1691, In the country of his adoption the simple paternal coat received additions, and he bore first and fourth', a lion rampant second and third, a palm tree encircled by a coronet growfrom a mount in base over all an escutcheon of pretence quarterly ing first and fourth, Three quarterly; second and third, a lion rampant. crests a demi-lion between two wings holding a sword in his paws; a tree encircled by a coronet a demi-lion between two probosces palm a forked pennon. holding William de Lechton witnessed a charter to Walter de Ro'ssy of Rossy, CO. Forfar, c. 1260; Sir William de Legheton, in 1291, and William de Lecton, of the county of Fife, in 1296, swore allegiance to Edward I.; Thomas, Canon of Moray, was Deputy-Chamberlain 1340; Henry had a charter from John de Moravia, of Lochflat and other lands in Inverdovat, Fifeshire, which was confirmed by David II. in the thirtyfourth year of his reign. Duncan was Sheriff-Depute of Forfarshire 1391 Walter was killed 1392 Henry was Bishop of Moray 1414, of Aberdeen 1422. lion
;
—
—
;
;
—
;
;
;
LINDSAY 11.
294
Sir Alexander was Prior of Torphichen 1424; David, Abbot of Arbroath 1483- 1502. Usan or Ullishaven, long the seat of the family, was erected into a barony by James IV., and was sold early in the seventeenth century by John, who went to Sweden. The Leightons intermarried with Burnett of Leys, Johnston of Caskieben, Rossy of that Ilk, Lord Ogilvy of Airlie, Sandilands Lord Abercromby, Maule of Panmure, &c. Robert sat in parliament for Montrose 1578-87, and Patrick 1612-30.
Alexander, M.D. of Leyden, a cadet of Usan, is celebrated for the severity of the treatment he received from the court of the Star Chamber he left issue, Sir Elisha, secretary to the Duke of York Robert, who ;
;
was Principal of the University of Edinburgh 1653, Bishop of Dunblane 1 66 1, Archbishop of Glasgow 167 1-4, died unmarried in London 1684; Saphira, who was mother of Edward Lightmaker, of Broadhurst in Essex she survived the archbishop, and was, along with her son who died in
—
1709, his executrix.
*Haitlie of Mellerstaine.
On
an early
seal of
Robert Hately,
on that of John de Hetlyn, in 1292, called I'Porte, there is a bird passant a flower of nine leaves ; and in the same year Alexander de Hatley uses a boar's head couped, thus originating what became the hereditary bearing. The family was long seated at Mellerstain, in the parish of Earlston, co. Berwick; Sir Robert dictus de Hatteley, and Matilda, his wife, were parents of William de Hatteley who, with consent of his wife Emma, about 1230 granted to the monks of Kelso a right of way through his lands of Meloustan, and permission to build a bridge. About 1270 Robert de Hateley and William de Hatteley witness charters; in 1296 Alisaundre de Hateleye did homage to Edward I. About 1560 a feud began between the Haitlies and their neighbours the Burnfields, in which Steven Burnfield, younger of Greenlawdene, was killed, and there were repeated bonds to keep the peace, outlawries and other proceedings, for twenty years. Henry, younger of Mellerstain, was accused of treason in 1567, and predeceased his father John, who, in his old age, made over to Walter Ker of Littledean, his liferent of the tower, and to several persons of his own name most of the estate. This led to a violent quarrel between these parties, and the Haitlies twice, in 1579 and 1583, broke into the castle and took forcible possession. Ker also claimed the marriage of John Haitlie, the young heir this John was dead before 1623, leaving a son, James, and an encumbered inheritance two years later James was served heir, and finally parted with the lands of his ancestors. Younger branches possessed Lambden, Sneip, Brumehill, &c., but the name has almost died out. The blazons of the arms vary a little Pont, Porteus, and Stacie all have— or, on a bend azure three boars' heads erased argent. Sir James Balfour gives azure, three boars' heads erased argent and Porteus has a second blazon azure, three boars' heads erased, or couped, argent. Guthrie of that Ilk. The lion quartering Cuming. ;
;
;
;
—
—
Rynd of Carse. a mill rind sable in chief. KiNNAiRD of that Ilk. Argent, three mullets
gules, three crescents or.
;
azure, quartering,
LINDSAY IL
295
Chalmer of Gadgirth, and Chalmer
of Segyden. Or, a fess checquy gules and argent, quartering, azure, a mullet argent. Armstrang of Mangertoun. Argent, a saltire azure. Arnot of that Ilk. Sable, a chevron between three mullets argent.
Neilson of Carcathie.
Argent, three sinister hands couped below
the wrist gules.
SwiNTON OF THAT Ilk. Vallange of Lochend. Broun of Colstoun.
Gules, three boars' heads erased or. Or, three water bougets sable. Gules, a chevron between three fleurs-de-
lis or.
The arms
Scot of Abbotshall.
of Balwearie, with a pheon azure
in the centre.
Inglis of Tarvit. As Lochend L. Aytoun of Dunmure. L. that Ilk.
The surname is taken from lands in Berwickshire, but the early seals of members of the family there have devices which do not resemble the coat here given. They are an eagle displayed, a flower with eight leaves, a fleur-de-lis, a crescent between two mullets in 1276, a man's head affronts 1327, and a hare or rabbit sejant. In 1296 Henry de Ayton, burgess of Haddington, and de John Ayr Ayton (?) of the county of Berwick, signed the Ragman Roll. Persons of the name were bailies of Haddington in the fourteenth John of century, and John represented the burgh in parliament 1645. in sat in as a commissioner from the 1482, Aytoun, burghs. parliament It is said that Ayton was carried by the marriage of the heiress to George, younger son of the first Lord Home, and his descendants bore a rose in the centre of their quartered coat as a mark of difference. John Aytoune had a charter of the lands of Over Pittedie, in Fife, ;
—
from David
II.
In 1496 Andrew makes payment of the tax of spears for that county, and was probably identical with the master of works at Stirling Castle Nisbet describes a seal of Andrew Ayton, Captain of Stirling 1497. Castle, who, in 1507, had a charter of the lands of Wester Dinmure, in Fife, which, a hundred years later, were erected into the barony of Ayton; it is first and fourth, a chevron between two stars and a crescent (? arms of Arnot) second, Aytoun third, an anchor. The arms of Sir John Aytoun of that Ilk were registered 1672-78,' as given by Sir David Lindsay. Mr Sinclair-Aytoun of Inchdairnie is heir male the estate he takes his designation from was acquired in 1539. There was printed for private circulation at Hamilton, in 1830, a genealogical account of the family, a work of small value. *Paterson of Luthrie. The Patersons are said to have taken the chief as vassals of the Douglases, Lords of Dalkeith, but there is no evidence to support this theory, and the bearing of that branch of the house of Douglas was a chief gules charged with two mullets. Easter
—
;
;
;
Dinmure, in Fife, after being for several generations in the family, was sold in 1669 to Andrew Paterson, bailie of Cupar, and his descendants held it for more than a hundred years. Several Patersons registered arms 1672 and later, all carrying the pelicans, and several also the chief with mullets, differenced for the cadets. The bearing of Captain Andrew of Dinmoore, whom I conclude to be the head of the elder line, and seller of the estate, is— argent, in three nests
4F
LINDSAY II.
2 96
Paterson, writer vert, as many pelicans feeding their young or. in Edinburgh, who consented to the sale, was ancestor of the Patersons
Hugh
of Bannockburn, co. Stirling, baronets, 1686, now represented by Hugh James Rollo, W.S., who is heir male of the family of Rollo of Powhouse. Mr Alexander Paterson, minister of Logie Durno, in Aberdeenshire, was the first of a family to which belonged John, Bishop of Ross ; John, Archbishop of Glasgow ; and Sir William of Granton, Clerk of the Privy Council, who was created a baronet 1687, a title which became dormant on the death of Sir John Paterson of Eccles, 1782. Colonel John Anstruther-Thomson of Charleton, co. Fife, represents the Archbishop and the elder line of this family. The burgh of Cupar was represented in parliament 1574, 1617-21, 1662-67, by persons of the name, probably of the Dinmoore family. BoNAR OF RossiE. L., the field is or. William Bonar was master of the artillery 1458 the arms of William Bonar, who was present at the Council of Munster, were the saltire and crescent, with a bomb fired as crest. The saltire and crescent are the bearings of William Bonar and of William of Rossie 1549. In 1509, however, John of Rossie 1461, used a chevron between two crescents in chief and a star of six points in base; and in 1586 the seal of William of Keltic, co. Perth, shows two swords in point surmounted of a chevron. William of Rossie, in 1579, quartered a fess charged with a mullet for Charteris. The only early registration is by a doctor of medicine, 1672-78, who adds a mullet in ;
chief.
William Boner was constable of Kinghorn 1328 William was and in William sat in for St Andrews. comptroller 1454; 1471 parliament Sandilands of St Monans. First and fourth, Douglas, the heart uncrowned second and third, or, a bend azure. Wemyss of Pittencreiff. First and fourth, or, a Hon rampant gules second and third, argent, a bend azure. Lindsay of Dowhill. One bar wavy in base, no mullet. * Rollo of Duncrub. A chevron between three heads are the bearings on an early seal the heads are more like those of a lion than a boar. Sir James Balfour's blazon is argent, a chevron engrailed sable between ;
;
;
;
—
three tigers' heads erased gules, for Rollo of Duncrub he gives later for Lord Rollo argent, on a chevron azure between three boars' heads erased
—
sable,
a mullet
The arms
;
or.
registered, 1672-78, by Robert Rollo of Powhouse, a cadet of Duncrub, are or, a chevron between three boars' heads erased azure, a bordure engrailed of the second for difference. Robert H., in the eleventh year of his reign, confirms a charter of Duncrub and other lands, granted to John Rollo by David, Earl Palatine of Strathern, and Earl of Caithness, son of the king, 1380. Duncrub was erected into a barony 151 1. In 1361 John Rollo was bailie of Perth. John Rollo was clerk of the cocket of Edinburgh, and a little later Dotninus yohannes Rollo, master of the house of St Germains, was clerk of the wardrobe and chamberlain to Queen Euphemia. The burgh of Dundee was represented in parliament by David Rollo 1481, James 1503-24, David 1535-40; and burgess families of good standing continued there for many generations. Peter Rollo, Bishop of Dunkeld 1 585-1606, and Senator of the College of Justice, was younger son of Andrew of Duncrub. His seal, in 1600, is a chevron between three boars'
heads erased.
—
LINDSAY 11.
297
The
lands of Powhouse, co. Stirling, were granted by the Provost of Trinity College Church, Edinburgh, by charter, 4th June 1556, to Mr David Rollo and Marion Livingstone, his spouse to this branch, now represented by Hugh James Rollo, writer to H. M. Signet, belonged Mr Robert Rollo or Rollock, first principal of the University of Edinburgh 1585. John Rollo, second son of the first Lord Rollo, acquired Bannockburn in 1636, which was the same year erected into a barony in his favour; he married Isobel Cockburn, also Annabella, daughter of George Buchanan of that Ilk, and died in March 1666, having had a son, Laurence, and three daughters Anne, married David Drummond of Invermay; Jean, married Alexander Innes of Cockstoune; and Isobel, who died unmarried. John Rollo is styled baronet in the service of his nephew, Lord Rollo, as heir male special of conquest 1672; no patent of creation is recorded, but as he is styled Sir in 1658, the honour may have been conferred by Charles 11. abroad. Sir Henry Rollo, baronet (?), Supervisor General of Salt Duties in Scotland, died 1733. Captain Rollo married the Countess of Athole before 1634; this must have been Lady Mary Stewart, widow of James, Earl of Athole. The patent conferring the barony of Rollo on Sir Andrew Rollock of Duncrub, 165 1, mentions the corruption in the form of the name, and expressly restores the original spelling, Rollo. Wood of Largo. L. the tree growing from a mount in base or. Strang of Balcaskie. As L. Petcorthy, the chevron ensigned with ;
—
;
;
a cross.
Abercrombie of that Ilk. L. Forsyth of Nydie, Or, three In
1296 William Frisith,
the boars' heads gules. grifiins segreant azure armed gules. of the county of Peebles, did homage to ;
Edward I. The seal
of David Forsith of Dykes, 1488, is a fess between three cross crosslets fitchde, and charged with as many lozenges. Sir James Balfour gives for Nydie in 1492 gules, a chevron engrailed argent between three griffins segreant or, and also the coat in L. The only entry in the Lyon Register in the seventeenth century is for Mr James Forsyth of Tailzertoune, minister of Stirling, descended of the family of Dykes, commonly designed Hallhill— the arms as L. crest a demi-griffin vert motto " Instaurator ruinceT Nisbet quotes from Lord Haddington's collections, a charter of Robert I. to Osbert, son of Robert de Forsyth, of part of the lands of William de Fersith was bailie of Salekill, in the sheriffdom of Stirling. Robert II. Edinburgh 1365. granted one hundred per annum out of the lands of Polmaise-Marischal, in the same county, to Forsyth or Fersith, clerk, who, in 1364, renders accounts of the custumars of Fersith was Constable of Stirling Castle before 1368. Thomas Stirling de Forsith, Canon of Glasgow 1487, sealed with two buckles on a bend. In the fifteenth century John Forsyth held lands in Aberdeenshire, and branches of the family settled at Millegue, in Banffshire, and at F"orres, for which burgh William sat in parliament 162 1 ; John, in 1652, was deputy from the burgh of Cullen to treat with the English Captain Forsyth was one of the prisoners who escaped when detained by the English in the vault below the Parliament House, 17th May 1654. Dykes was in Lanarkshire, where David Forsyth held lands in 1494, and he or a
—
—
;
—
;
;
;
LINDSAY 11.
298
Robert de Forsyth witnessed a charter of Robert Keith, Marischal of Scotland 1426; David of Gilcamstoun, co. Aberdeen, 1490, was probably direct ancestor of John of Dykes who, in 1541, sold Gilkemstoun to Gordon of Pitlurg. Henry was rector of Monymusk 1543. David of Dykes 1488 David of Dykes 1507; John of Hallhill 1540-56; David of Dykes 1571 James of Dykes, commissary of Glasgow, 1608-13, and his son, Matthew of Auchengray, advocate; William of Dykes 1615; William of Dykes 1640; and Barbara, heiress of the family, wife, in 1656, of Patrick Kello, are in William of Nydie 1434, and Alexander of Nydie the line of this family. Mr James, 1604, are the first and last we find of the Fifeshire branch. who registered arms, married Marion Elphinstone, and d.s.p. 1675,
namesake designed scutifer is a witness there
in 147
1.
;
;
leaving his property of Polmaise-Tailzertoune to his nephew, James Bruce of Garvell, descended from the Airth family. This gentleman assumed the surname of his mother's family, and was dead in 1699, leaving a daughter, Rebecca Forsyth or Bruce of Polmaise-Tailzertoune.
Martine of Cardoun.
Sable, a lion rampant argent
armed and
langued gules.
Makgill of Rankeillour. a bordure engrailed argent. EcHLiN OF PiTTADRO. First, argent, on a mount vert a stag courant gules attired sable second, argent, on a mount vert a hound ;
courant azure
a lymphad sable
fourth, Stewart. a chevron argent between L. on gules, two escallops in chief or and a boar's head erased in base (? proper), three mullets azure. DuNLOP OF THAT Ilk. mistake, the arms being those of Reid of ;
third, or,
MuLTRAY OF Seafield.
;
;
A
Collistoun.
*CouTTS OF AucHTERCouL. Richard de Cotis was a landowner in Moray 1343; Donald and John de Gouts were put to the horn in 1392, for being concerned in the slaughter of Sir Walter de Ogilvy, Walter de Lichtoun, and others. The lands o^ Auchtercoul, which formed part of the earldom of Mar, were granted by the King, in 1433, to William
Mr
Coutts and his heirs. They were held by the family, who intermarried with Irvine of Drum, Forbes of Towie, Ross of Auchlossen, Burnett of Leys, &c., till 1635, when the Earl of Mar recovered them from
William Coutts. Captain Alexander Coutts held out the castle of Brechin for the Earl of Huntly against the Regent, and after its capture was hanged, in August 1570. A younger son of Auchtercoul is said to have settled at Montrose about the end of the sixteenth century several of his descendants were provosts of the burgh, and John of Fullerton, provost of Montrose, registered arms 1672-78, being the coat here represented, with a bordure ;
engrailed gules. date.
Members
of this family settled in
Alexander of Redfield, merchant
in
London the King
in
London about
that
1758, acquired by in Scotland, and the purchase the heritable office of Usher to same year registered arms, when he was allowed to carry the official baton of usher quarterly with the coat of Coutts. In 1759 he entailed the which was sold his nieces, Agatha, wife of Captain John ushership, by Taylor, who d.s.p., and Concordia, who married, first, Thomas Marshall, secondly, Gotlieb Gotz, both merchants at Dantzic, and had an only child, Frederica Juliana Marshall, who married Gotthilf Doebler of Dantzic.
LINDSAY IL
299
Patrick, a younger son of Alexander Coutts, Provost of Montrose, settled in Edinburgh about 1695, and founded the banking business his son, John, Lord Provost of Edinburgh still carried on in London father of Patrick was Coutts, merchant and banker in Edin1742-44, ;
burgh and London, who registered arms in 1761, being the original coat within a bordure embattled azure charged with four buckles or, and these are the bearings of his grand-niece, Angela Baroness Burdett-Coutts, but the stag's head seems by some error to be now represented as cabossed. family of some position in Fife bore the same arms as the Coutts Auchtercoul. of Alexander Coutts, 1483, was on the assize of service of James Bonar of Rossie; Alan Coutts, in Spittell, had, with others, a daughter, who married William Alexander of Menstrie, and was grandmother of the Earl of Stirling, and Allan, chamberlain of the Abbey of Dunfermline 1552, who acquired Pitteuchar, Balbougie, Grange, &c. his descendants intermarried with Boswell of Balmuto, Brown of Finmount, Bruce of
A
;
Blairhall,
&c.
KiNLOCH OF THAT Ilk. charges
L.
;
the boar's head
is
couped, and
all
the
or,
*BOTHWELL OF HaLBANK. *RoBERTSON OF Strowan. The arms are Fergusson. Kilkerran, in Ayrshire, was the seat of the Fergussons in
the fifteenth Mr of that a not earlier was John place, century, royalist, knighted, and not as stated after the but before died, Restoration, generally April 1650. His son, Alexander of Kilkerran, an officer in the army, was a prisoner for debt in the Tolbooth of Edinburgh 1661, and left a son, Alexander, who sold Kilkerran in 1700, and is represented as heir general by Patrick Charles Douglas-Boswell of Garrallan, Esq. if
;
Mr
John Fergusson, advocate, who acquired Kilkerran, is said to have been son of a younger son of Sir John, which is confirmed by his funeral entry February 1729 he had been created a baronet in 1703, and registered the arms of the family, the buckle being argent. A recently published volume on " Inverurie and the Earldom of Garioch," by the Rev. Dr Davidson, contains a full account of a family in that district, to which belonged William, who represented Inverurie in " parliament 1661-63, Robert the plotter," James of Pitfour, a Senator of the College of Justice 1764-77, and the Fergusons of Kinmundy, now Represented by William Ferguson, Esq., of that place. These all bear the buckle and boars' heads the name appears in the north in the reign of David II., who confirmed a charter of Thomas, Earl of Mar, of the lands of Huchtirerne, Egoni filio Fergusii, 1364 his descendants took their surname from these lands, and as late as 1507, in the service of John Ouchtirarne, as heir male of his uncle John, in the lands of Ouchtirarne, ;
;
;
expressly stated that he linealiter descendit de legitimis masculis quondam Egonis Fergousone domini de Vchtirarne. Several of the Inverurie family have registered arms, and one of them, Peter of Warsaw, obtained the Royal licence, 1779, to assume the surname and arms of Tepper of Poland, being those of his mother's the connection of the Fergusons with family, in addition to his own Poland began before 1660. *SkENE OF THAT IlK. Lockhart of Lee. Sable, three boars' heads couped or. it
is
;
4G
'
LINDSA Y IL
300
Mortimer of Flemingtoun.
Or, a lion rampant sable
armed and
langued azure, gutt6 de sang.
Reid of Barskimming. W. the field is gules. Fraser of Philorth. Sable, five fraises in saltire argent. Cleland of that Ilk. L.; the hare or and the hunting-horn sable. MuREHEAD of Lauchop. A mullet argent between two acorns or on ;
the bend.
Makdougal of Makairstoun. Azure, a lion rampant argent armed and langued gules, gorged with an antique crown or. In 1698 Thomas, then head of this family, registered the arms, the lion being crowned not gorged, and with the addition of a bordure of the second charged with six fraises of the field, to indicate descent from Margaret Her son, Fergus Fraser, heiress of Mackerston, Yetholm, and Clifton. Macdowylle, had a charter of confirmation of these three baronies 1374. Sir Archibald of Mackerston married Euphemia, daughter and coheir of Sir Hew Gififord of Yester; his seal, 1398, is a lion rampant crowned and double queued. Fergus, first of Mackerston, had a younger son Uchtred, to whom he granted an annual-rent and there are repeated transactions, 1469, 1479, ;
1542, of the M'Doualls of Logan as to this burden on Mackerston, which the late John Riddell, advocate, considered "conclusive" as to the descent of Logan from the above Uchtred. Thomas of Mackerston sat in parliament 1560, and his grandsou, of the same name, represented the shire of Roxburgh 1596. Sir William Makdowel, the king's resident in the Low Countries, in 1653 uses on his seal parted per pale a lion rampant contournd, in chief a fraise (?), on the dexter the sinister, parted per fess in chief a stag's head cabossed, and in base a heart. Nisbet says the arms of M'Dowall of Stodrig, co. Roxburgh, cut in stone there in 1593, were a lion rampant gorged with a crown and holding in his forepaws a man's heart. Font's Manuscript contains a singular blazon for M'Dewal argent, the shape of a man in wrath sable, holding in his dexter hand a dart and in his sinister a firebrand gules, on a chief azure a cockatrice of the
—
;
—
—a
—
"
"
—
Take all they mak supporters two dragons vert, spouting out fire before and behind proper. A descendant of the Mackerston family went to Sweden 1594, became steward to Queen Christina, obtained a birthbrief setting forth his descent and sixteen quarters in 1656, lived to the age of a hundred, and left nine sons, all of whom served in the Thirty Years' War. second
;
crest
serpent
;
motto
;
Colonel Jacob suffered imprisonment in Russia, and was, in 1674, forty years after his death, created a baron along with his son, Colonel Gustaf, who, in 1658, was sent on a mission to the English Government. The arms borne by the ennobled branch of this family, which became extinct in the time of Charles XII., quarter a galley, an arm holding a crosslet, and a rock and two salmon, from which it would seem that they had been taken for Macdonalds. The direct male line of Mackerston ended in 1723, on the death of Henry Macdougall, whose daughter and heir, Barbara, wife of Sir George Hay of Alderston, Bart., is represented by John Scott of Gala, and the estate is held by Miss Maria Scott-Makdougall of Makerstoun. Fairlie of that Ilk. Or, a lion rampant gules langued azure, in dexter chief a mullet azure.
LINDSAY IL
301
LiDDELL OF Halkertoun. L. the spur rowels are azure, and in dexter chief a horse's head couped argent is added. Seal of Sir James Liddel, 1482 a bend charged with three mullets quartering a lion rampant. Seal of Janet, Lady of Halkerston, 1554 three stars of six points pierced on a bend. Seal of John of Halkerston, a an on bend between head erased in chief and an otter's 1594 eagle's (?) head (?) erased in base, a mullet. Arms of Liddell of Hammer in Orkney, cut in stone, 168 1 ^a bend charged with three mullets between a bird's head erased in chief and a ;
—
—
—
—
horse's head couped in base, impaling Traill. The arms registered, 1672-78, by John Liddell, merchant in Edinburgh, a descendant of Halkerston, are gules, on a bend between a cross crosslet fitchde in chief and a fleur-de-lis in base argent, three spur rowels of the first. Galfrid Liddell 1266, Alan of Lydel 1327, Nicholas, Provost of Aberdeen 1327, Sir William, Sheriff of Aberdeenshire 1358-61, Sir William 1402, are members of the family who are connected with land in three charters of David H., one of them confirming to William the lands of Lochullike (Lochtillow) in the barony of Bathgate, granted him by Robert the Steward. Robert sat in parliament 1467, and Sir James of Halkerston 1478-81 in 1483 he and his eldest son, John, were forfeited for treason in corre-
—
;
sponding with England. Ninian of Halkerstoun was killed by Captain Pentland before August 1573; John of Halkerston and Beatrix Lauder, his spouse, have a charter in 1592. Later, there were Liddells of Nether Toksyd, and Liddells portioners of Barns.
In 161 7 James Liddell represented the burgh of Rutherglen in parliament. In 1453 William, son of John de Ledale of Lochtillow, had, on his own resignation, a Crown charter of these lands to himself, his brother David, Gilbert his uncle, Robert Ledale of Balmure, and the heirs male of their bodies. John had, the year before, sold his lands of Roughwood in Ayrshire, but retained Braidstane. The daughter and heir of John Liddell of Westshield, co. Lanark,
descended from Braidstane, married, about 1490, Andrew Denham, and thus founded the family of Denham of Westshield. Rentoun of Billie. The chevron and three towers. Meldrum of Segie. Argent, an otter sable crowned or issuing from water in base.
Sydserf of that Ilk. The field or. KiNCAiD of that Ilk. Field azure, three mullets or
in chief.
IX.
ARMORIAL MANUSCRIPTS BY
SIR
JAMES BALFOUR, Lyon King at Arms
1630-54,
And another Herald.
4H
Baronet,
*Agnew. Blair of that Ilk, anno 1402. As Blair of Adamtown in L. *Balmackyne. Balfour. As might be expected, Sir James gives the arms of many branches of his own family, Monquhaney, Burlie, that Ilk of old,
—
Cariston, Kirkton, Denmill, Kynaird, Ballowe. Two entries in his MS. of blazons are interesting Balfour of Lalethin sable, on a chevron argent between three roses " of the second, an otter's head erased proper. This coat I confirmed to Doctor David Balfour of Lalethin in Ao. 1638." Balfour of Balbirney sable, a chevron argent charged with an otter's head erased of the first, with the distinction of a third brother in eminentiore parte clypei, between three pairs of talzeours shyers of the second. Robert of Balbirnie registered arms 1672-78, when the bearings were altered to argent, on a chevron engrailed between three mullets In 1843, William Balfour of sable, a selch's head erased of the first. in his Orkney, having proved Trenaby, pedigree as heir male of the seated at in Fife, free barons prior to 1587, was family, Monwhanny allowed the chief coat argent, on a chevron sable an otter's head erased of the field ; crest a dexter arm in armour erect, the hand holding a " baton in bend gules tipped argent motto— " Fordward supporters two otters proper. These arms, as a quartering, with the supporters, had been long borne by the Bethunes of Balfour, as heirs of line of the original family of Balfour of that Ilk, and were registered, 1672-78, by James Bethune of Balfour. The Monwhanny family formerly bore the arms with the addition of a saltire couped sable in base. Balfour of Denmill is given in F. Sir James makes the field or, and adds, as his own distinction, a label of three
—
:
—
—
—
—
—
;
;
—
points gules. When Sir Patrick of Denmill, baronet, registered arms, 1773, he " God gives increase." dropped the label crest a crescent or motto James, younger son of Balfour of Balgarvie, had a feu-charter of Denmill 1452. Sir Michael of Denmill, Comptroller of the Household to Charles I., was knighted 1630, and left a large family, of whom were the Lyon King of Arms ; Sir Alexander, third baronet of Kinnaird and Denmill Sir David of Forret, a Senator of the College of Justice ; Michael of Randerston and Sir Andrew, M.D., an eminent botanist, knighted in 1682. Denmill was sold about 1750, and the baronetcy is dormant. ;
—
;
—
;
;
Barclay of Gairtlay. *Batwoode. Sir James,
(?
Blacwoode). * Black.
*Blunseill.
in
his
MS., writes the name Balwoode
BALFOURS
3o6
Charters of Loneargent, a fess azure. the fess charged with a mullet of the first, and within the Royal
Charters of Empsfield fenan
;
MS.
;
tressure.
In 1291 John de Cantelou, and in 1297 Sir John de same person, swore fealty to Edward I. At the same time William de Cantilupe served in Scotland under Edward, and had summons to parliament in England as a baron, 1299-1308. His arms bear no resemblance to this quaint canting coat (? a singing wolf), but were gules, three leopards' heads inverted jessant fleurs-de-lis or. William de Cantilupe, at the siege of Caerlaverock, bore ^gules, a fess vair between three fleurs-de-lis issuant from leopards' heads or. *Carric. *Crail. Surname taken from a locality in Fife. Adam de Carail
*Cantelupe,
Cantelu, probably the
—
—
was Bishop of Aberdeen 1 207-28. *Cullane. *Davidsone. *Glendoning. *Grant. L. Sir D. Lindsay has
—azure,
three golden circlets Balfour's blazon is Grante of Freuchey, azur, three coronetts rad. or. W. has azure, three antique ;
adorned with
crowns
fleurs-de-lis or
leaves.
or.
—
—
— —
Seals of Alexander Grant 1524 a fess between three crowns and charged with a star of John Graunt of Culcaboch 1529 a fess between three crowns John of Freuchy 1572 three crowns. Arms registered, Ludovick Grant of Freuchie, or of that Ilk gules, three an1672-78, by " Stand sure;" supporters tique crowns or; crest a burning hill; motto two savages proper. The tincture of the field seems to have been changed at this time, or not long before, as Porteus and Stacie both have azure, but the latter adds a note, " of ould it was, az. feild, now gules." curious armorial transaction took place in February 1777 Neil " Grant, describing himself as oldest lawful son of the deceast John Grant " in Linearne, and nephew of Duncan Grant last of Auchernack (who died in the preceding October without male issue), " and therefore undoubted representative of the said family of Grant of Auchernack, chieftain or head of the Clan Allan," did " upon certain grave and weighty considera;
;
—
—
—
A
— —
;
and just and onerous causes, renounce, overgive and convey to and " in favours of Doctor Gregory Grant, near physician in Edinburgh," his relation and beloved cousine, and his heirs my right and title to the coat of arms and ensign armoriall belonging to the said family." He made over at the same time all his lands, heritages, titles, and honours. Upon this the arms registered, 1677, by James of Auchernack, were allowed to Dr Grant, then President of the Royal College of Physicians, great-great-grandson of James Grant of Burnside, a younger son of Allan
tions
of Auchernack.
There were published
in 1796,
"
Memoires
historiques, gdn6alogiques,
politiques, militaires, &c., de la Maison de Grant, divisde en plusieurs branches tant en Ecosse qu'en Normandie, en Allemagne, en Suede en Danemarc, &c. Par Charles Grant, Vicomte de Vaux des anciens barons de Grant, chef de nom, titres et armes de cette famille en Normandie, officier-gdn^ral au service de Sa Majestd Tr^s Chrdtienne, chevalier de rOrdre Royal et Militaire de Saint Louis," &c. This gentleman had, in 1793, married a lady whom, by a curious
BALFOURS
MS.
307
anticipation of a change made in our own day, he calls Mary, daughter of His Philip Jones Herbert of Llanarth and Sarah Lovenberry, his wife. statement is, that in 1359 William and Tassain, sons of Thomas Grant, who was younger son of the chief of the clan, and Bigla Cuming his wife, went to France, founded families which flourished as Vicomtes de Caen,
Seigneurs de Quetteville, de Plainville, de Souchey, de Vaux, Barons de Catelet, Barons Grant de Vaux, and finally, in 1777, Vicomte de Vaux. His assumed armorial bearings are of a splendour quite in accordance with this lineage. First, the Royal arms of Scotland as descended in the male line from the Macgregors, themselves of Royal origin; second, ermine, on a chevron gules three antique crowns or, for Quetteville third, argent, a fess azure between three cocks gules crowned with antique crowns or, for Grant, as sometimes borne in Normandy; fourth, or, a fess checquy azure and argent, surmounted of a bend gules for over all, in an escutcheon of pretence, the Stuart, impaling England (?) arms of Grant of Grant crest and motto of that family the supporters are wreathed about the head and middle, and rest their exterior hands on clubs. Below the shield is placed as a compartment, a king's head couped " crowned ii l antique, and there is a second motto Cuinich bas gules " " Armorial de The be searched in vain for a Berry may Alpiny foundation for this structure if we turn to the " Nobiliaire de Normandie," we find a good family of the name of Grente, said to be ancestors of, or descended from, the Grants of Great Britain present F61ix Vicomte de Grente arms Edmond, representative, ^argent, a fess azure surmounted of a cross moline gules. There are given no fewer than nine families of the name of le Grand. One of these possessed Questeville and Souchey, and bore ermine, on a chevron gules three spur rowels (not crowns) or. Another, Seigneur de Mouleri, bore argent, a fess azure between three cocks one in chief and two in base gules, that in chief holding an olive branch purpure this is evidently what the third quarter is borrowed from or founded on. The family of Questeville had for arms or, a saltire azure indented ;
;
;
;
—
;
;
—
;
—
—
;
—
sable.
make
pretty evident that the genealogy has been much misrepresented but, on the other hand, it is certain that the Viscount had a good pedigree, as on the list of gentlemen who had made the necessary proofs just before the Revolution, but not been admitted to 'the honours of the Court, is le Vicomte Grant de Vaux, Colonel de Cavalerie. In 1778, John Charles Adolphus Grant of Blairfindy, Colonel in the French service, and styled Baron, obtained from the Lord Lyon a certificate of his descent and seize quartiers ; he was nephew of the Abbd Few families are so Grant, President of the Scots College, Paris. carefully entered in the books of the Lyon Office as the Grants supporters were granted to Sir Francis, baronet, Lord Cullen, by Royal Warrant 1720; to Sir Alexander of Dalvey, baronet, by Royal Warrant and to Captain Charles of the Royal Navy, C.B., representative of 1761 the Elchies family, by the Lyon King of Arms 18 16. There are thirty-two entries of arms. In 1258, Laurence and Robert, called Grant, appear in Morayshire'; " it seems prolaable, as suggested by Mr Chisholm-Batten, in his History of Beauly Priory," that they came north with their kinsmen the Bysets.
These
facts
it
;
:
;
In 1246, Henry HI. granted
Lowdham, 41
co. Notts, to
Walter Byset,
BALFOURS
3o8
MS.
he should recover his lands in Scotland. The adjacent manor of East Bridgeford was then held by William le Grant, husband of Alfreda Byset, the heiress. Walter did return to Scotland, and there was a second marriage of a Grant to a Byset heiress. Laurence was Sheriff of Inverness-shire 1263; Robert had a charter from Sir John Prat c. 1268; William, as a Crusader, had an English protection 1270; William, 1292, in Scotland, and at the same time William le Graunt of East Bridgeford Patrick, castellan of Cluny, co. Perth, 1 29 1-2 David, Sheriff of Stirling 1295 Robert de (? le) Graunt, of the county of Fife, swore fealty to Edward I. John and Robert were prisoners in Gloucester Castle 1296; John and Ralph (?) were liberated till
;
;
;
;
1302 William was in Ireland; John was on an David and William Graunte in Ireland 1335 John le Grant had a pension from David II. Maurice, Sheriff of Inverness in favour of Sir John 1357 safe-conduct 1340; Patrick, 1345; English Thomas, 1363; Malcolm, 1380-94. The surname remains preceded by le or the in the fifteenth and even in the sixteenth centuries. John Grant of Freuchie had his lands erected into a barony 1493; John of Freuchie sat in parliament 1560; in 1694 Ludovick of Freuchie had a charter erecting his estates into the regality of Grant, but the chiefs of the family had long before been known as the following year;
assize at Logic 1320
in
;
;
;
;
lairds of Grant, or of that Ilk.
The present representative is the Earl of Seafield, who, through the marriage of James Grant of Pluscarden, in 1702, to Anne, daughter and heir of Sir Humphrey Colquhoun, inherits the baronetcy of Colquhoun of Luss, and succeeds to the earldom in consequence of the alliance of Sir Ludovick Grant, baronet, and Lady Margaret Ogilvie, daughter of James, Earl of Findlater and Seafield.
Henderson of Fordell. Parted per pale indented, or dancettee, sable and or, on a chief argent a crescent gules between two ermine spots.
*Hannay of Sourby. •Hay of Tillebothill.
Sir James Balfour's blazon makes the bordure checquy argent and azure, the bendlet sable charged with four mullets or.
Mr
Laing gives a
seal, 1368, of John de Heia, Lord of Tolibothel, evidently the same ; three inescutcheons surmounted of a bend indented, the shield ornamented with lines forming a lozenge pattern (?). Law of Jaruestoun. Sable, a crescent argent. *
Irvine
(?).
*Ladylye.
Laidley or Laidlaw, a border family. Laidlaw of Moswas seated there during part of the seventeenth and
fennan, co. Peebles,
eighteenth centuries.
Lidderdale of the Isle. Gules, a chevron ermine. Arms registered, 1672-78, by Thomas of St Mary's Isle, co. Kirkcudbright azure, a
chevron ermine; crest sight
—an
eagle's
head erased proper;
— motto—
"
Fore-
is all."
Thomas Lidderdale acquired the estate by marriage with the niece and coheir of Mr Robert Richardson, Prior and afterwards Commendator of St Mary's Isle, and it remained the seat of their descendants till the early part of last century.
In 1558 Richardson granted a charter of part of the lands of the to priory Stephen Lidderdail, probably of the same family; in 1572,
BALFOURS
MS,
309
another of the Isle to James, and Thomas his son, probably on the marriage of the latter to his own niece. Andrew Lidderdale was Abbot of Dryburgh 1489- 1506. Lawson. Seal of Mr Robert, 1540 a saltire and chief, the latter charged with three saltires couped seal of Thomas, 1497 a saltire and in chief a mullet.
—
—
;
*Macckulloch of Torhouse. *Macky of Large. Mackculloch of Marton. Founder
of
Marton Church, anno
.
or and vert.
Lozengy Menzies, anno 1510. Ermine, on a chief gules a rose argent. Otterburn, quondam de Reidhall. Argent, a saltire between four (?) heads couped sable, a chief vert. charged with a crescent of the
otters'
on the dexter side. *Plafair. *RouLAND, anno 1548 or 1528 Rolland of Disblair—argent, a
;
arms
registered, 1672-78,
field
by James
checquy sable and or between three of the second crest a fleur-de-lis argent. ships rigged Arms granted, 1788, to Adam Rolland of Gask, advocate argent, a fess checquy sable and or between two ships in chief, their sails furled of the second, and a fleur-de-lis in base azure. Mr James Rolland was prior of Balquhidder 1546 William was Sheriff" of Aberdeen 1540 and in 1526 William sat in parliament. William Rolland acquired Gask by marriage, in 1600, with the daughter and coheir of Adam Cunningham of Gask, and it is now the The Rollands property of their representative, Adam Rolland, Esq. held lands of the Commendator of Dunfermline soon after the Refor;
fess
—
—
;
;
mation. Gules, on a pale between four pallets or three crescents of the first. Balfour blazons Ruthven of Lownam 1 527 paly of six gules and or, the middlemost charged with a heart of the first. Sterling of Keir and Ardoche. Argent, on a bend vert three buckles of the first. *Somervaile of Camnethane. Seal of William de Somerville There was at Drum an old coat three 1180-89 3- lio^ rampant. heads. leopards' The Lords Somerville have always borne azure, three mullets, two and one, between seven cross crosslets fitchde, three, one, two, and one or. In the register, 1672, it is blazoned for James of Drum, the head of the family crusilly of seven cross, &c. The appearance here of the original bearing the lion rampant is interesting, as it has no place in the coat recorded by James, Usher to His Majesty's Exchequer, representer of the family of Cambusnethan 1672-78 argent, three mullets gules within an orle of six cross crosslets
RuTHVEN, Culbertus, miles anno
1441.
—
—
.
—
—
—
—
—
—
fitchee sable.
In an illuminated MS. in the Lyon Office, probably 1570-80, there is a curious representation of the arms of Lord Somerville the crosses are argent supporters two frogs, each seated on a small piece of turf " Feir God crest a frog surmounted of three ostrich feathers motto " " in Ivf." it has been Pont also gives the motto Fear God in love altered to in life, which is not an improvement.
—
;
—
—
—
;
;
;
BALFOUR S
3IO The well-known
"
MS.
Memorie of the Somervilles
"
contains a quaint
prosperity, and misfortunes of
this old family, at
account of the origin, without a known representative, although the barony present so unhappily extinct. be cannot Carnwath William de Somerville witnessed charters of David I. and Linton were the property, c. i i6o, of his son (?) of the same name. These were held as free baronies in the fourteenth century, and several of ;
the family sat in parliament before they attained, c. 1429, the rank of lord of the parliament. the Gilbert Lord Somerville sold the estates and died in 1618 usual accounts of his family do not agree with the services of Joseph Douglas, afterwards Sir Joseph of Pompherston, in 1622, to his mother and his uncle, William Somerville. " after Drum is said to be In the Memorie," 1679, the next heir " " in condition in who was Tiviotdale, on lands purRobert, living good Mr minister of Ednam. his chased by father, John, There were at this time two younger sons of Drum ^John, an officer in the military service of the States General of the United Provinces, who ;
—
married
Anna Maria Susanna
Hasill,
a Dutch lady
;
and George, who
also married.
Cambusnethan was granted as a
barony to a younger son, by charter, in the second year of Robert IIL, and was sold by Sir James in 1647; from his second son, but heir male, James, descended the Somervilles of Corehouse George of Corehouse was dead in 1768, his heirs free
;
being his sister Violet, wife of Captain James Johnston, Seventy-second Regiment, and his niece Violet Inglis, widow of William Lockhart of Birkhill.
The
heir male is said to have been Thomas, D.D., minister of Jedson was the late William, M.D., Deputy Inspector-General whose burgh, " of Army Hospitals, husband of the authoress of The Connection of the
Physical Sciences."
Among
the branches of the family of Somerville of
which no printed notice has appeared, is that represented by George Adair Somerville, Esq., late of Airhouse, co. Berwick, where his ancestors were seated for a hundred and fifty years, intermarrying with Watherston of Howden, Adinston of Carcant, Cochrane of Ashkirk, the heiress of Adair of Altoun, &c. *Smith. Stewart, Sheriff of Perth. First and fourth, Stewart with a label of three points gules in chief; second and third, a fess charged with three mullets sable.
TiNDAiLL, anno 1489.
Azure, two mascles in fess
*Wadderburn. *WiSEMAN.
Balfour's blazon
is
— sable,
or.
a crescent between three
blazing stars or.
Andrew and William Wysman Moray 1226; Sir Andrew, 1244;
occur as witnesses in the chartulary of Sir Thomas, Sheriff of Elgin 1248;
Thomas, Provost of Elgin 1261 in 1296 William dictiis Wiseman, and William Wisman, of the county of Elgin, swore fealty to Edward 1. the following year John was a prisoner in Fotheringay Castle in 1305 Alexander was Sheriff of Forres and Invernarn, and William Sheriff of ;
;
;
Elgin for Edward
man had
Gilbert WysI., both being called de (? le) Wyseman. a charter, from Robert I., of Rothes, Mulben, &c.; and William
BALFOURS MS, Wiseman
obtained from David
the barony of
II.
311
Dun,
forfeited
by David
de Strabolgi.
*YouNG. One of these interesting coats, probably taken from seals, shows the origin of what became the usual bearing three piles and as
many
annulets.
The other—a
green
— sapling
—
is,
of course, allusive to
youth.
Douglas of Pumferstoun. See Sundries. Hunter. Parted per fess, in chief a greyhound courant and three hunting-horns stringed sable.
4 K
in base
X.
THE PUBLIC REGISTER OF ALL ARMS AND BEARINGS IN
SCOTLAND A.D. 1672-78.
JEdie of Moneaght.
An
old family of Aberdeen burgesses. In 1670 Alexander Aidy, then and for thirty-three years resident at Dantzick, had a birth-brief, showing his paternal descent from burgesses in Aberdeen, and that he was in the female line descended from Burnett of Brathniss and Irvine of Lenturk. There were also Aedies of Newark in
Aberdeenshire, and James Adie sat in parliament for Perth 1596. Dalrymple of Stair. EccLES OF KiLDONAN. There is an inaccurate account of this family " in Douglas's There seem to have been two separate Baronage." the one from Eccles, co. Berwick, the other their surname families, taking from Eccles in Dumfriesshire. Of the former was John de Eccles, who swore fealty to Edward I. in In the thirty-first year of David II. the lands of Garmilton Dunyng 1296. fell to the Crown on the decease of John de Echylls, a bastard Ralf de was dead two his lands of Corsgate, in Coldingwhen Eklys years after, ham, were forfeited, on account of his traitorous dealings with the English in or before the ninth year of the reign of Robert II., Margaret, grand-daughter and heir of the late Thomas de Eklys, resigned parts of Woodhall and Thurston. In 137 1 Matthew, son of the late William de Eychles and Beatrix de Carletoun, his spouse, resigned half the barony of Oures in Kincar;
;
dineshire.
The Eccles of that Ilk, co. Dumfries, were seated there till the Restoration. younger branch possessed Kildonan in Ayrshire, which was erected into a barony by charter in favour of Mr William Eccles, 2nd December 1671 Douglas says Robert of Kildonan died without he was alive in 1726, and died before April 1730, leaving three issue; coheiresses Helen, wife Grizel, wife of Anthony M'Kie of Glencaird of Thomas Kennedy, surgeon in Wigton ; and Lilias, wife of David Kennedy of Bellymore. Mr Hugh, minister of Straiton, younger son of John of Kildonan, died in 1662, leaving a son, William, physician in Edinburgh, who became heir male. His son Martin, also a physician in Edinburgh, left two coheirs Margaret, married Henry Lindsay, merchant in Edinburgh, who succeeded to Kilconquhar, and took the surname of Bethune ; and Elizabeth, married Major Basil Alves. Fairholme of Craigiehall. Sophia, daughter and heir of this John, married William, Marquess of Annandale, and her descendant, Mr Hope-Vere of Craigiehall, quarters the arms. To the same, family belonged the Fairholmes of Pilton, Baberton, Greenhill (acquired by marriage with the daughter and heir of Adam Gairden), Greenknowe, Ferme, Ferrie, and Farie are variations of Chapel, and Ravenswood. this name, and bore similar arms. Pont gives for Ferrie azure, a ship's anchor argent ; Stacie the " some sayes it is Farames coat, but I doubt its not." same, adding, Fairne of Tarlogie. Seal of Finlay Mackfaid, Abbot of Fearn, co. Ross, 1442 a stag behind a tree and three stars he died 1485, and these
A
;
—
;
—
—
—
;
4L
3
1
THE L YON REGIS TER.
6
arms, the stars being in chief, are on his monument at Fearn. This Fearn. David of Tarlogie died in 1704, and family took the surname of was succeeded by his nephew, David Ross or Macgillendrish of Tarlogie. In 1 58 1 Alexander Fearn had a Crown charter of confirmation of in February 1600 his son Finlay was his lands of Nigg and Pitcalzean of the Cross at Edinburgh, for forging the signature of his said hanged, of his son Alexander, dated 1575. favour in a charter father to Andrew of Pitcalzean left a widow, Christian Ross, and twelve children, who were driven from their lands and persecuted in the reign of James II. in 1690 she got a decree for 5000 merks damages. In 1267 family took the same name from Fearn in Forfarshire. Peter de Feme witnessed the charter of foundation of the Messyndew at Brechin, granted by William de Brechin George Feme, Archdeacon of Dunkeld, was nephew of George Brown, of the Midmar family. Bishop of ;
;
A
;
the See 1484-15 14.
Gair of Nigg. This coat is cut on several monuments of members of the family, the oldest that can be deciphered having the date 1567 it was registered, in 1864, with the chief engrailed for difference, by Captain William Gair, of the Second (Queen's Royal) Regiment of Foot. The Gayers of Berkshire and Cornwall bore argent (or ermine), a ;
—
fleur-de-lis sable.
Sir John Gair or Gaer was Sheriff of London 1633, Lord Mayor 1646; Sir Robert Gayre of Stoke, co. Bucks, K.B., 1661, left issue. The bearings are on the seal of AlexanJ AFFRAY OF KiNGSWELLS. Two of the family represented that der, bailie of Aberdeen, c. 1613. in in the of Charles I. ; Alexander was chosen parliament reign burgh that neither the provost in January 1636, on which Spalding remarks, man nor the election was much thought of, he " not being of the old blood of the toun, bot the oy of ane baxter, and thairfoir wes set doun in the prouestis deas before his incuming (ane bakin pye) to sermon." Two others of the Aberdeen family registered arms at the same time, and it is understood that the late Francis Jeffrey, Senator of the College of Justice, was one of its descendants.
Keith of Tilliegonie. Langlands of that Ilk.
The surname is taken from the estate, but as the Langlands were lords of half the barony of Wilton, co. Roxburgh, they sometimes took their designation from that property. David II., in the thirty-fourth year of his reign, granted to Marion Cumyne, widow of John de Langlands, the lands of Milsallystoun and Ochterhuyd, then in his hands by recognition. The former property, afterwards called Milsington, was, in 1453, exchanged for Hepe, then In 1431 the head of the family is belonging to Sir Walter Scott. nobilis homo yacobtis de Langlandis dominus ejusdem, James off Langlandis, lord of that
Ylk
James of that Ilk, 1451-55; John, fiar, 1455; Ilk, 1494; James of Wilton, 1500; Roger of Wilton, 1508; that Ilk, 1569-76; Robert of that Ilk; George, his son and 1612 Robert of that Ilk, 1643 the laird was fined ;^i8oo in ;
Robert of that
James of successor,
1662
;
Robert of that
;
Ilk, 1704 George of that Ilk, 1738, died in 1752; Robert of that Ilk, his son was, in 1758, served heir in half the barony of Wilton, &c. Miss Langlands, said to be last of the family, died at Hawick 1814, and was buried in Wilton Church. ;
;
Laing of Morisland.
;
THE LYON REGISTER.
317
Macdonald of Clanranald. M'Aben of Knockdolian. Knockdolian,
co. Ayr, came into the of M'Cubbin and possession Fergus Margaret Kennedy, his wife, about 1660 Fergus, last of Knockdolian, died about 1713, leaving two coheirs Margaret, married Robert Cathcart of Genoch; and Catherine married, Lin of Little Larg. The estate remained with Mrs Cathcart's descendants till lately. Tredennock was the property of Thomas M'Cubbin 151 1 Archibald of Tredennock left a son, John of that place, 1602 it is stated in Paterson's "Ayrshire" that Fergus of Knockdolian was of this family. Martin M'Cubyne held lands in Garvald, under the Douglases of
—
;
;
;
Dalkeith, 1378.
There were M'Cubbins of M'Cubbinstone, co. Dumfries, in the seventeenth century M'Cubbin of Balhamie ended in coheiresses on the death of John, in or before 1691. Fergusia was wife of Sir George Wishart of Cliftonhall, baronet. Naesmith of Posso. There is a " tradition " that the first of the name got the name and arms in the reign of James IIL, 1460-88, by doing ;
service to his sovereign against the Douglases, and disguising himself as a smith to escape capture. The name appears considerably earlier; Adam Nasmith, owner of lands at Brechin, died before 1420. The Nasmiths were an old family of burgesses at Hamilton, and one of them was minister of the parish 1645-62 the Nasmiths of Auchingraymont, near Hamilton, ended in Arthur, who left three coheiresses 1765; Naismith of Drumloch, an existing family; Nasmyth of Middlemiln, otherwise Nasmyth Lodge, co. Fife, were all of the Hamilton family, which intermarried with Roberton of Whistleberry, Hamilton of Westburn, Young of Killiecantie, Moncrieff of Culfargie, Stewart of Newmains, Campbell of Orchard, &c. Michael, at first servitor, and afterwards chamberlain to John Hamilton, Archbishop of St Andrews, acquired half of Posso by marriage with Elizabeth, daughter and coheir of John Baird of Posso he was never knighted, and died about 1607. Their grandson, James, acquired the other half of Posso, and represented the county of Peebles in parlia-
good
;
;
ment 1630-39.
The
elder line ended on the death, unmarried, about 1712, of Robert his cousin-german and heir male, James, advocate, had acquired ; Dawick about 1690, and been created a baronet in 1706. The printed pedigrees of the family are incorrect. The oldest authority for arms is Font's MS. gules, a dexter hand
of Posso
—
proper holding a sword argent between two broken smith's hammers no crest motto "Marie non arte." James, first of Dawick, during his cousin's lifetime, carried the arms as registered within a bordure argent charged with four boars' heads couped gules and as many hunting-horns sable, the latter to indicate maternal descent, his mother having been Isabella, daughter of Sir James Murray of Philiphaugh, wife of John, younger brother of Sir Michael of Posso. Thomson of Maynes. This George, a younger son of the Faichfield family, d.s.p., and was succeeded by his nephew, Thomas of Faichfield, CO. Aberdeen. ;
—
;
XL HERALDIC MANUSCRIPT COMPILED DURING THE REIGN OF JAMES
VI.
THE PROPERTY OF THE
EARL OF CRAWFORD AND BALCARRES.
4M
Titles of Emperors, Kings, and Princes a.d. 1612. The manner of the funeral of the Earl of Salisbury (Richard Neville). Arms of some of the Scotch nobility, and arms of Scottish gentlemen
;
shields only.
*Claresoune. (?) Clarkeson. •Hardy. Sir George Mackenzie tells a story as origin of the surname and arms. William was unicorn pursuivant 1554-67.
to the supposed
*Methven. Steill. Argent, three furisons shaped like ducal coronets azure. *LlTTELL. BucHAN. Argent, three boys' heads and busts erased sable. Spottiswood. Three covered cups in place of garbs.
*Fleschour. Buchanan of that Ilk. L. the lion guttd or. Sir James Steward. Stewart within a bordure compon^e argent ;
and
azure.
Sir David Dunbar. Gules, a lion rampant argent, on his shoulder a cinquefoil gules, a bordure argent sem6e of cinquefoils of the first.
*Erskine of Kinnoull. Azure, on a bend engrailed argent three buckles gules.
Lesly.
AucHiNLEK OF YT Ilke. Argent, a cross raguly sable. BoswELL OF Belmont. First and fourth, Boswell third, argent,
a
mullets of the
field.
and chief gules, the
saltire
Stirling of Cader and of Keir.
latter
There
second and charged with three ;
here the usual confusion as to the bearings of these families. Cader, argent, on a bend engrailed sable three buckles or ah'as azure has been interlined as the tincture of the bend, but struck out again. Keir, argent, on a bend azure three buckles or alias or has been added for the field and scored out then argent struck out and or substituted the bend has been made sable, but azure restored, and finally the buckles changed to argent and back is
;
;
;
;
again to
or.
Lord St Michell.
Sable, a fess between six lozenges voided or
;
in F. for Michell.
Seton of Penbrige annulet
(?
Parbroth).
Each
crescent
is
charged with an
or.
Hamylton of Anderwell Hamilton
;
second, Abernethy
;
*Rate of that Ilk. Hepburn of Wauchton.
First Innerwick). Bonkle. of Stewart third, (?
Hepburn with a
and
fourth,
cross patde argent in
dexter chief.
*R0WELL. •Rowle. Richard Reuel 1178-1211; Henry Reuel 1188-1214; 1365 Barnard of Rowle, lord of Foleroule, resigned his lands of Hugh Ross of Fylorthe.
•Lewynton.
The
coat
is in L.,
somewhat
different, for
in the
in
hands
Levyngtoun
'
HERALDIC
32 2
MS.
—
of Saltcottis the bend plain and the head that of a bear. Nisbet describes the seal of Patrick Livingtoun of Saltcoat, 1593, as a bend with an otter's or boar's head couped in chief; another seal, 1482, has the head of a wolf (?). The arms are not registered, but Stacie has the following entry a bear's head erased azure argent, a bend engrailed gules and in chief muzzled of the second, "to Alexander Livington 1673, but not payd." In another place in his MS., there is added in a later hand for crest, a " Whitrik green." whitrik motto In 1363 John de Levynton had an English safe-conduct; in 1425 John belonged to the Royal household in 1467 George Lord Halyburton granted predilecto scuHfero Willehno Levinton de Saltcottis right of namculum in mare to fish at Gulane. George Livingtoune of Saltcoats d.s.p. before 1705, when his niece, his Margaret Menzies, was served heir of entail and of provision heir served male same time at the Gilbert was Livingtoune, nephew, The Livingtouns of Midfield claimed to be heirs male, and general. ended in two coheiresses 1768. Margaret Menzies of Saltcoats married, first, John Hamilton of Pencaitland; second, Hon. William Carmichael of Skirling. Her mother, Mary Livingtoune, after the death of her first husband, Alexander Menzies of Culterallers, married Sir William Binning of Walliford ; Ann Livingtoune, the other coheir, married James Baillie, W.S.
—
;
—
;
;
Sir David Hom.
Vert, a lion rampant within a bordure engrailed
argent.
*Seras. *SiR William St Clair.
The Sinclairs of Longformacus, co. a cross bore Berwick, engrailed gules, but there is no Sir argent, William. Robert of Longformacus, advocate, had his lands erected into a barony 1663, and was created a baronet the following year. Sir John, sixth baronet, a writer in Edinburgh, died in 1798, and the title seems to be extinct. John Sinclair, burgess of Edinburgh, bailie and dean of guild, acquired Stevenson, in East Lothian, and was created a baronet 1636 Sir Robert, third baronet, registered arms 1672-78, as given from a Funeral Escutcheon. In another funeral entry the saltire is changed into a cross. Sir John, sixth baronet, having, in 1765, inherited Murkle and other estates in Caithness, under an entail executed by Alexander, ninth Earl of Caithness, in 1761 (his lordship having disinherited his daughter, Dorothea, Countess Fife), was allowed, in terms of that deed, to bear the quartered coat of the Earl, with a crescent argent for diflference, and supporters, two griffins parted per fess or and gules, armed and langued
—
;
azure.
notices the origin of the Sinclairs of Stevenson, who claim descent in the male line from the Longformacus family according to their Funeral Escutcheon, the paternal grandmother of the first baronet was a Sinclair of Longformacus. Mr James, younger son of Sir John of Stevenson, married Jean, daughter of Sir James Durham of
Father
Hay
;
Pitkerrow and
who
secondly, Sir James Balfour, Lyon King of Arms their son, James Sinclair of Auldbar, co. Forfar, was created a baronet, married Isobel Balfour, daughter of his stepfather, sold Auldbar 1670-78, and acquired Kinnaird from Sir Michael Balfour, Luffness, ;
married,
OF JAMES
Vr.S REIGN.
323
—
his arms, given by Stacie, were baronet, in 1675 argent, a plain cross sable and cross a cross parted per engrailed gules (? engrailed quarterly sable and gules); crest an otter issuant, evidently allusive to his Balfour connection motto " Quo cunque ferrar.'' Sir George, his son, sold Kinnaird, married Margaret Crawford, and died in 1726, leaving a son, Sir John, third baronet. SuARD. See Sundries. The coat borne at the siege of Caerlaverock Richard Siward, who was governor of Dumfries, Wigton, and Kirkby for Edward I. in 1292. His daughter, Helen, married Isaac cudbright Maxwell, and in 1326 made an agreement with Randolph, Earl of Moray, In 1360, being then a widow, she as to her lands of Kellie in Fife. of her Kellie in favour cousin, Walter Olifaunt. resigned Edward, son of Seward, witnessed a charter of David I.; Sir Richard, called Syward, in 1291, swore fealty to Edward I., also Richard Syward William Siward had a charter of Kellie from Robert I. Sir Richard, in ;
—
;
—
;
;
1292, was prisoner in England, and his estates, partly in Northumberhis wife, Maria, had been land, were seized by the King of England and to Simon had four married children by her second Fresel, previously husband, of whom Richard was married and a prisoner in Gloucester Castle; he was still a prisoner in 1298, when the severity of his treatment was mitigated in consideration of his father's services in Flanders. Richard, the father, was, in 1299, appointed warden of Nithsdale. ;
Ker of Fernihirst. Field gules, stag's head argent. Ker of Cessford. Field vert, mullets gules, one unicorn's
base argent.
Macklenand of Bumbe. As Maclelland of Irvyn of Drum. Argent, three holly leaves
Campbell.
Gyronny argent and
*Haldane of that
sable.
head in
that Ilk in W. vert, stalks uppermost.
—
Porteous has ^gules, two coat was In 1861 the allowed as a quartering to leopards argent. Richard Haldane-Oswald of Auchencruive, co. Ayr, being blazoned gules,
two leopards
Ilk, co.
Roxburgh.
in pale passant
gardant argent. Bernard, son of Brien, made a grant to the Church of St Mary and monks of Kelso of a carucate of his land of Haudene 1 165-71 his son Bernard took his surname from his lands. In 1296 Bernard de Haudene, of the county of Roxburgh, swore Broughton, in Peeblesshire, belonged to Edward of fealty to Edward I. Both Haldane and Broughton were held as Haudene about 1350. baronies by William Haldane of that Ilk, who died in 1533 John sold Haldane 1625, died in 1648, leaving two sons Andrew Haldane, the last His cousin-german, George, survivor, died childless in March 1673. of whom writer to the signet, left two daughters, Agnes married, in 1675, Patrick Haldane of Lanrick, co. Perth, a younger son of Haldane of Gleneagles, who died in 1686, and his widow married James Stewart of Her son and heir, John Haldane of Lanrick, died Christwell, advocate. in 1765, leaving six daughters: Anne, married Thomas Forrester of Denovan, and had one son, who d.s.p. Agnes, married John Dundas of Manor, and had an only child, Margaret, who married Alexander Oswald of Shieldhall Lilias, married William Wilsone of Sands, and had issue married Charles Stewart of Ardsheal, and had issue; Janet, married Isobel, John Murray, merchant in Glasgow and Margaret, married William ;
'
;
;
;
;
;
;
Pontine of Ardoch.
4N
324
HERALDIC
MS.
OF JAMES FES REIGN,
Arms Arms
of the nobility of Ireland. of foreign kings, princes, minor states, free cities, &c. List of knights of the carpet, made at the marriage of Prince Arthur ; several lists of nobility; list of barons, bannerets, and knights of the Bath made at the coronation of Henry VII. and of his consort; knights made
by Henry VIII.
at his marriage to
Anne
Boleyn, &c.
(/litlaiiu
On-
XII.
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS COLLECTED DURING THE REIGN OF CHARLES L
*Black of Comiston, CO. Edinburgh. BoNAR OF RossiE has the saltire engrailed. argent, a
Bonar of Keltie
—
base a mascle azure. BoAGE. Argent, a chevron sable between two annulets in chief and a boar's head erased in base gules. BoAG OF BuRNHOusE. Argent, a chevron gules between two cinquefoils in chief azure and a boar's head erased in base sable. *BoNNYMAN. David II. confirmed a charter of the Abbot of Kinloss. to Donald Bonnyman of a tenement in Aberdeen. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries there were merchant burgesses of Edinburgh, and a '* writer to the signet of this name. .-w; *Brodie of that Ilk. The seal of David Bi-odie, burgess of Nairn, When 1544, has two mullets in chief and a man's heart in base. Alexander Brodie of Brodie was appointed Lord Lyon in 1727, he registered his own arms and those of six cadets of his family. The chief coat is a chevron between three mullets azure crest a right argent, gules, hand holding a bunch of arrows proper; motto "Unite;" supporters two savages wreathed about the head and middle with laurel. This family were thanes of Brodie in the fifteenth century, and, it is Thomas dominus de Brode was killed at said, at a very early period. Pinkie. Their estate was erected into a barony 1597. Alexander of that Ilk was a Senator of the College of Justice 1649- 1658, and left a Diary, which has been published in part in 1740, and printed in full, with that of his son, 1863, for the Spalding Club. " Genealogy of the Brodie Family," printed for private circulation in 1862, begins with Malcolm Thane of Brodie, in the reign of Alexander but in 1337, the lands de Brothy III., but does not supply proofs; saltire sable, in
— —
—
;
—
A
domini are mentioned in the Exchequer Rolls. In the arms granted in England to the family of Sir Benjamin Brodie, the eminent physican, who was of Scottish descent, the field is altered to azure, and the chevron and mullets made argent. *Brand. Alexander of Baberton, 1672-78, registered arms as he;-e, only putting three spur rowels or on a chief sable, instead of two in chief. In 1 72 1 Sir Thomas, Usher of the Green Rod, registered the same coat, varied by making the field or and the stars or spur rowels argent, quartered with two rods in saltire as the badge of his office he died in 1761. Redhall was acquired by the laird of Baberton, son of the founder of the family who was a merchant burgess of Edinburgh, in 1680, and afterwards was called Castle Brand. The family ended in George Brand of Castle Brand, by whose creditors the estate was sold in 1749. Sir Alexander Brand, of Brandfield, was knighted before the Union, and left descendants. All the estates named are in Mid-Lothian. Broune of Colstowne. Azure, a lion rampant argent. *Brounhill. Thomas of Brounhill was a bailie of Edinburgh 1361,. and several other persons of the name in the county of Edinburgh appear soon afterwards two of them made donations to the Cathedral Church of ;
;
St Giles.
40
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
328
BucHAN OF Dyce.
Argent, three lions' heads erased gules, a chief
azure.
Two
other coats are given one this without the hearts, the other has the cross azure and a crescent gules in dexter chief. Arms were registered, 1672-78, by James of Gormack, co. Perth— argent, a cross sable between four men's hearts proper. the William Butter had a charter of Gormack from Robert III. lands were erected into a barony before 1636. Adam Butter held lands in In the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, which were escheat to the king 1331. 1360 William and Patrick Butter were collectors of contributions for the
•Butter of Gormack.
;
;
king's
ransom
in
Gowrie.
Andrew Butter, bailie of John of Gormack died before
Perth, sat in parliament for the burgh 1652. 1786, leaving a daughter and heir, Agnes. William Butter, physician in London, descended from the Gormack family, registered arms in 1767, on his marriage to Catherine, daughter of Sir John Douglas of Kelhead, baronet in consequence of this alliance an About imperial crown was placed above the heart in the first quarter. ;
1770 Faskally was purchased by Henry Butter, by whose descendant is still
it
possessed.
Butler.
Two
one as L., the other azure, a fess between a crescent for difference. three covered cups seals of Alexander Botile with a fleur-de-lis, and John de Early a with rose or Buteler wheel ornament, are preserved in H. M. Record The seal of Sir John le Botilier, who swore fealty to Office, detached. Edward I. in 1291, is a chief charged with three covered cups. In 1296
Johan
le
Botiler of
coats, the or, in chief
Cramond, Johan
le
Botiler of Perthshire,
and Sir John
called le Botillier, all took the oaths to that sovereign. The Dispensation, in 1347, for the marriage of
Robert II., then designed Sir Robert, lord of Strathgrif, and Elizabeth Mure, mentions that he carnaliter cognovit a noble lady, Ysabella Boutellier, who was related to the said Elizabeth.
In 1470 John de Butlar seals with a fess engrailed between three covered cups, the shield being borne on the breast of an eagle. In 1677 George Butler of Kirkland, in East Lothian, registered parted per fess engrailed azure and gules, three covered cups or. David II. confirmed a charter of Robert the Steward to Michael Butler of the barony of Kinboyscher. Thomas Butler was in parliament 1496 perhaps the person for whose soul mass is to be said in the Church of St Giles, in terms of a charter of mortification 1512. John Butler was a bailie of Edinburgh and another held the same office 1470. 1429, John Mr George of Blans had a son, Mr John of Kirkland and Blans, a J. P. 1663, whose son George died in 1682, leaving John of Kirkland, who in 1690 was served heir to his grandfather, in the barony of Thornydikes, CO. Berwick. BoswELL of Auchinleck. Boswell quartering argent, two bars sable (?) for Auchinleck. *Belshes of Tofts. In 1674 Mr John of Tofts, co. Berwick, registered and John of that Ilk at the or, three pallets gules, a chief vair same time paly of six or and gules, a chief vair. This family takes its name from lands near Ancrum, in Roxburghshire, and the direct line ended in John Belshes of that Ilk, who left four daughters and coheirs
—
;
—
—
;
OF CHARLES LS REIGN.
329
1721. John, a younger son, was an advocate, and acquired Tofts his eldest son, Sir Alexander, a Senator of the College of Justice 1646-56, His great-grand-nephew and heir, represented the county in parliament. conferred inherited the in 1706 on Colonel George John, baronetcy Wishart of Cliftonhall, and in 1778 registered arms, with supporters, as Sir John Belsches-Wisheart, baronet, heir male of Belshes of that Ilk. ;
1804 John Hepburn-Belshes of Invermay and Balmanno, co. and of Blackcastle, in Mid-Lothian, entered arms, when he was also Perth, allowed supporters in 1864 this branch became extinct, and the representation and estates passed to Sir John Hepburn - Stuart - Forbes, baronet, heir general of the elder line, who then recorded arms quarterIn
;
ing Belshes.
The representation and the right to the Wishart baronetcy now vest in the eldest son of Lord Clinton, and the family of Belshes seems to be extinct in the male line. *Byres. Arms on the monument, in the Greyfriars' Churchyard, to John Byres of Coittes, bailie, dean of guild, and treasurer of the city of Edinburgh, who died in 1639. In 1755 arms were. registered by Patrick
of Tonley, in Aberdeenshire, stated to be representative of " the family of Coatts" azure, a chevron argent between three martlets volant or. the bees were changed to martlets it is difficult to see, as they are distinctly drawn and described in several verbal blazons. Porteus gives for Byres of Strathaven- -azure, a chevron between three bees volant arrierde or and the same for Sir John of Coates, with " the motto Rule be one." Sir John was son of the bailie of Edinburgh, and died in 1647, leaving issue. Coates was sold by John Byres
—
Why
—
;
in 1702.
A
few years after Tonley was acquired by Robert Byres, merchant, his descendants in the male line failed on the burgess of Aberdeen death of Major-General Robert Byres of Tonley his cousin and heir, Patrick Moir, assumed the surname, and, dying in 1863, was succeeded by his brother, the present James Gregory Moir-Byres of Tonley. ;
;
*Brunton. Robert III. *BoNTiNE.
Edward
fealty to
Walter Burntoun held part of Luffness
Thomas Buntyng,
in the reign of
del counte de Pebles, in 1296 swore '
I.
.
Findlay Bunting had a charter from Robert III. of Mylnetelame and of Cardross in 1424 Sir Finlaw Buntyn was arbiter in a dispute Eart etween the burghs of Renfrew and Dumbarton. In 1489 Robert and William Buntine were, with other men of Lennox, pardoned for holding ;
Dumbarton
Castle against the King.
Ardoch was the property of John Bontine early in the sixteenth Nicol of Ardoch sat in parliament for Dumbartonshire century Nicol of Ardoch registered arms argent, a bend gules between 1685. ;
—
three bunting birds proper. He died in 1760, leaving an only child, Jane, who, five years before, had married Thomas Ewing of Keppoch
;
her grandson and heir, Alexander Ewing, merchant in Glasgow, in 1869 William Bontine of Ardoch and registered arms quartering Bontine. Auchendinnan, brother and heir male of Nicol, was dead, without issue, in 1770, when his niece, Mrs Ewing, was served heir to him. The next branch of the family was Bontein of Milndovan, also in Dumbartonshire, where they were seated in the reign of Charles I.
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
330
Robert of Milndovan married his kinswoman Margaret, daughter and heir of Archibald Bontein of Balglass their son, Archibald of Balglass, died about 1770, leaving a son, Sir James Bontein, Lieutenant-Colonel and Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, knighted in 1798, registered arms 181 3, as heir male of Ardoch, as above; the crest was altered from a bunting bird standing on a garb proper, to a demi-eagle issuing from a ducal coronet proper, and he was allowed supporters two lions proper; '' motto Copiose et opportune." Sir James died in 1820 at Hanover, ;
—
—
leaving issue.
The
estate of Ardoch, which had been erected into a barony in 1707, was by entail, in 1757, settled by Nicol Bontine, failing descendants of his brother, on the families of Grahame of Gartmore, and Cuningham, Earl of Glencairn, the heir in possession being obliged to use the sur-
name and arms of Bontine only; Mrs Ewing and her descendants are excluded absolutely, and Ardoch has remained in the possession of the Grahames. James, third son of William of Ardoch, married Agnes, eldest daughter and coheir of Robert Barr of Trehorn, Ayrshire; the descendant of their son, Robert Buntine-Barr of Treehorn, claims the representation of the Ardoch family. Younger branches possessed the estates of Kirkton and Succoth. Major Hugh Buntine in 1670 had a Crown charter of the barony of Kilbryde, Ayrshire, for which county he was elected M.P. 1690; he registered arms, 1672-78 argent, three buntine birds proper, on a chief azure a sword fessways of the first hilted and pommelled or. He was succeeded' in 1 7 14 by his nephew, William Baillie of Monkton, whose son sold
—
Kilbryde.
Thomas Bountine
of Bountinehall, about 1680, registered— argent, a chevron sable between three buntine birds proper. *BoYLE. This coat bears no resemblance to that of Boyle of Kelburne, co, Ayr, represented by the Earl of Glasgow.
—
set
two
*Bennet. Porteus gives for Bennet in Nithsdale gules, a cross on three degrees argent, on a chief of the second a crescent between stars of the
first.
The Grubbet family expired on the death of Sir John, fifth baronet, about 1760, and the estate passed to Nisbet of Dirleton. Chesters belonged to the principal family of the name about 1580, and descended to Robert of Chesters, whose sisters and coheirs, Agnes, Helen (wife of Archibald Douglas of Tympendean), and Isobel (wife of Archibald Hope, collector of excise), sold it towards the end of the eighteenth century. In Fife the name
found about 1450. Sir Richard Bennat, chaplain to James, Archbishop of St Andrews, was presented to the vicarage of Arbroath 1459 Nichole Bennate has a suit with Spens of Kilspindy 1489 Bennets of Busses, in Fife, are met with in the seventeenth century, and ended in an heiress, Christian, who married John is
J
;
Scotland, and died in 1702, leaving issue. *Blensheil. See B. for another coat, i486, Robert Bleyndshelys went to England in the suite of the Scottish Ambassadors. 1482, Robert the name Blindsell, alderman of Aberdeen, was elected on the articles is borne by residents in that burgh as early as 1396, and long afterwards. Herald John Blindsele, Islay 1596, died before 1614, leaving two ;
daughters.
OF CHA RLES US REIGN. Burnett
33
1
of Leys. These arms were
registered, 1672-78, by Sir Andrew, a of the afterwards Senator advocate, College of Justice, with the title of Lord his younger brother, Alexander, also an advocate, entered Saline, 1679-88 arms at the same time with a crescent for difference and in 1690 those of Mr John Birnie of Broomhill, co. Lanark, are recorded: he has no lion's head on the fess, but that is his crest. In 1728 John Birnie of Broomhill compiled an account of his family, which was printed for private It commences circulation, in 1838, by W. B. D. D. Turnbull, advocate. with Birnie and two of his sons, who, in the year 838, signalised themselves being taken fighting under Kenneth, King of Scots, against the Picts in one the each and confined stocks, they by" leg amputated that prisoners member, so escaped, and at the next battle fatal to the Picts they were observed to behave themselves with a new courage wherewith the loss of their legs had animated them."— An important contribution to the early The reward of this exploit was a grant of the history of surgery. in of Birnie Morayshire, which remained in the family till sold by barony William of that Ilk in the minority of James VI. Unfortunately for this bold fiction, the facts are that Birnie was held by the bishops and then by the Earls of Moray that Birnie, as a surname, does not occur once in the chartulary of the bishopric, and is hardly to be met with at all till the seventeenth century. Henry Birney was a notary public 1551 James Birnie was killed before 1575, of which Thomas Meldrum was accused in 1619 James Birnie of Browbrie sat as a juror. " William " of that Ilk may probably be identified with William, in 1568, was employed to take down the burgess of Edinburgh, who, He is said lead from the roofs of the Cathedrals of Aberdeen and Elgin. to have married Margaret Eraser, who, in the genealogy, is called a daughter of Philorth, maid to Queen Mary, who appointed her mistress of the Mint in her widowhood, after the death of her second husband, Thomas Aitchison, goldsmith and assay master of the Mint. This seems all wrong. William Birnie, burgess of Edinburgh, and Helen Acheson, his spouse, acquire a tenement in Leith 1567 eight years later, Helen, with consent of her then husband, Archibald Stewart, burgess of Edinburgh, resigns this, and a charter is granted in favour of Thomas Acheson, burgess of Edinburgh, and Margaret Fraser, his spouse, who had been previously married to James Henderson, also a burgess, of
*BiRNiE.
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Edinburgh. Mr William Birnie, only son of the Edinburgh burgess, who was minister of Lanark 1597, of Ayr 161 1, and Dean of the Chapel Royal, is an authentic personage at any rate, and the genealogy gives a minute account of his descendants, in the male and female lines, which is valuable.
Mr
John, minister of Carluke, married Jean, daughter ancj evencoheir of James Hamilton of Broomhill, Bishop of Galloway, and tually His son was the in 1685 acquired Broomhill, Floors, and Almornes. writer of the pedigree. Captain James Birnie of Broomhill married Margaret Hamilton of Dalserf, and assumed her name he died without issue in 1796, when his niece, Mrs Katherine Birnie or Mitchelson, succeeded him in the entailed estate. The book plate of this family shows supporters, described by Mr ;
4P
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
332
— two
desks proper, an priests precant sable in reading other their with pretensions. assumption in keeping William Blackwood, vicar •Blackwood. The seal, in 1584, of
Turnbull as
Mr
of Duddingston, has these bearings, the mullet being on the dexter and the crescent on the sinister side. About the middle of the sixteenth century three brothers, Adam, settled in Henry, and George Blackwood, said to be from Dunfermline, learned in the professions, the first France, and were distinguished named being the most eminent his son was a judge at Poitiers, where the father had settled as a conseiller. They bore azure, a fess or or in sinister chief, and mullet between a lozenge argent in dexter chief, a
—
;
a crescent of the second in base, and quartered gules, a stag's head couped argent (? for Crawfurd). The Earl of Dufferin is head of a family settled in Ireland since the middle of the seventeenth century, descended from John Blackwood, born in Scotland they long bore argent, a saltire sable, on a chief of the second three olive leaves of the field. This closely resembles the only coat registered, that of Robert, dean of guild of Edinburgh 1704, afterwards Sir Robert of Pitreavie, co. Fife oak leaves proper, argent, a saltire sable, on a chief of the second three Pitreavie remains the property of a mascle gules for difference. See W. ;
—
—
Sir Robert's representative. Lord Dufferin has lately discontinued the use of these arms, and adopted a coat founded on the older bearings. several genera1490, Gilbert Blackwood in Knockintinny, co. Fife tions of Blackwoods can be traced at Dunblane, where, in 1563, James held land of the Commendator of Inchaffray Sir William, in 1569, produces the register book of Dunblane; Henry, son of William, bailie of Dunblane, was clerk of the commissariat of Dunblane 1638, and had a ratification of the office 1661. Andrew was bailie of Perth 1522, and several times afterwards and Adam held the same ofiice 1545. family of Blackwoods, portioners of Coldrain in the seventeenth century, produced two who bore the name of Adam. In Edinburgh, Peter, 1560; William, a burgess, 1642; Robert, a merchant, and George, who were both fined in 1662, may have been of ;
;
;
A
the dean of guild's branch.
Campbell of Strachur.
Gyronny of eight sable and
or,
a martlet
gules on the last gyron.
or rather, Calder of Aswanlie. This coat was with the registered, 1677, by Laurence Calder of Lyniger in Caithness, addition of four stars and as many crescents, alternately disposed orle-
•Caddell of Asloun,
ways
azure.
Mr Cosmo
"
The Thanes
of Cawdor," printed for the main line of that great family from Donald, its extinction about 1530; Muriel, heiress of Cawdor, married a younger son of the second Earl of Argyll, and was ancestress of the Earl of Cawdor. Seal of Donald, thane of Cawdor and Sheriff of Nairn 1 431 -40-—a hart's head cabossed, and a chief charged with a buckle on the dexter side. Innes, in traces the Spalding Club, thane of Cawdor, 1295, to
William, thane, in 1449 seals with a hart's head cabossed and two mullets in chief.
OF CHARLES US REIGN. 333 head cabossed with a buckle Muriel, Lady of Cawdor, 151 —a hart's
1
between the attires. Her descendants quartered or, a hart's cabossed sable attired gules, and the buckle developed into another quarter or, on a fess azure three buckles of the first, but this was dropped when John Campbell of Calder
—
—
entered his arms in 1722. The Calders of Aswanlie held lands in Aberdeenshire for many generations, and may perhaps have a representative in America, as the last trace of them I have met with is the service, in 1809, of William in Hertford, Connecticut, to his uncle, Alexander of Aswanlie. Calder, merchant in Elgin, said to descend from Aswanlie, acquired the barony of Muirtown in 1674, and in 1685 had a Crown charter of all his lands de novo erected into the barony of Muirtown a on him conferred the has descended the to baronetcy, following year, Sir William Calder arms registered or, a hart's head Henry present In the county of Caithness the Calders of cabossed sable attired gules. Lynegar, Ackingale, and Strath can be traced from the beginning of the sixteenth century to the early part of the nineteenth. John Calder was
James
;
—
;
Bute Pursuivant 1560-70. See W. for two Cader coats. *Chrystie of Whythouse.
William Christie had a feu charter of in the lands of of Stenton, Fife, from the commendator of Dunfermpart his descendant, James of Whythouse, co. Edinburgh, line in 1565 writer to the signet, was grandfather of James of Whythouse and Stenton, whose descendants possessed the estates of Newhall in Haddington, Ratho and Baberton in Mid-Lothian, and Riddry in Lanarkshire, and intermarried with Dick of Grange, Foulis of Ratho, Gordon of Lesmoir, &c. Although the tinctures here are or and sable, are so given by Porteus 1660, and in three entries of Christie arms in the Lyon Register 1672-78 they were altered when Sir Archibald of Riddry registered arms in 1818 as heir male of Stenton— or, a saltire engrailed gules between four mullets azure, quartering Foulis of Ratho, and with supporters two His son represents the family. griffins proper. David Christie sat in parliament, 1685-1703, for the burgh of Dysart, and was of the same branch. *Clarksone. Porteus blazons the coat argent, a saltire vert^ two crescents gules, a cross fitchde sable. An Edinburgh burgess family of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, who for a time held the lands of Cousland. •Copland of Udoch. Seal of Thomas Copland 1524 two garbs Porteus gives the arms as in chief and a boar's head contournd in base. in G., but with the mullets or, and calls the quartering Cunningham. Udoch, in Aberdeenshire, was in the possession of Alexander Copland about 1490, and seems to have been sold early in the seventeenth century by Alexander, who, after engaging to serve in Germany with Captain Ogilvy in 1627, deserted with his son William and his son-inAlexander served in Russia and law Patrick Mowat of Balquholly. Alexander is the and Poland, Copland who, in 1640, Captain probably was excommunicated by the presbytery of Strathbogie, for receiving James ;
—
—
—
Con, an excommunicated papist. William de Copland witnessed the charter of Waldeve, son of Cosson of Huctred, of the lands of Dundas, c. 1160. patric, to Helias,
334
:
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
,
Robert de Copland is one of the witnesses of a charter of Robert de Quinci to Holyrood. In 1249 Sampson de Coupeland is one of the English envoys to settle the laws of the marches. David II. granted, to Allan of Fawsyde, the forfeiture of "ane " in the time of Edward I. and Edward Baliol. That Coupland herald de who Cross was created taken at Neville's was Coupeland, by John king a knight banneret, with a pension of ;^5oo, was warden of Berwick, Sheriff of Northumberland and Roxburgh, and died in 1362. In 1310 William de Coupeland, and nine other prisoners in Scotland, were exchanged for Mary de Brus, sister of Robert I. 1338, John de Coupeland has a pension in place of the lands of Ormiston, co. Roxburgh, restored to their former owner William •
Dalmahoy. The surname is local, taken from Copeland in Cumberland or Northumberland, and it seems probable that some persons of the name It is to be met with in Dumsettled on the north side of the border. friesshire early in the sixteenth century, and in the seventeenth there were many Coplands burgesses of Dumfries. John, Provost of the burgh 1680-83, was father of William, Provost 1702-8, who acquired Collision and Blackwood. William of CoUiston registered arms 1731 as in Porteus' MS., although what he had to do with the Cunningham quartering it might be crest a horseman in armour brandishing a sword difficult to show " Vicir In 1773 Alexander of Collision recorded arms, when motto two tigers proper were granted as supthe quartering was dropped and the crest was to a knight in armour issuing from the altered porters, wreath, looking to the dexter, brandishing a sword in his right hand, and bearing in his left an imperial crown, all proper. This looks like an allusion to the claim to descend from the captor of David II., set forth in the appendix to Nisbet's " Heraldry," where the motto is given as " Regie viciy *CURRIE OF NeWBIE. CuRRiE OF Kelwood. The same with a chief argent. See B. for
—
—
;
;
;
another coat.
On
the seal of Peter de Currie, c. 1180, there is a dragon ; that of Simon Currie, 1588, is a saltire with a mullet in chief (? a rose). Hugh de Currie was present in the curia regis of William the Lyon at Edinburgh; 1243, Robert de Currie witnessed a charter, and died 1245 ; Sir Walter de Corry, and Nicol de Corry of Dumfriesshire, signed the Ragman Roll Sir Walter, in 1292, was keeper of the Castles of Sir John, in 1297, was a Wigtown, Kirkcudbright, and Dumfries. -:
:
;
till April 1299, when he was exchanged. David II., in the thirty-fourth year of his reign, granted the lands of Coulyn and Ruchane in Dumfriesshire to Robert de Corry and Susanna his wife, daughter and heir of Thomas de Torthorwald, who was killed at Durham the lady having died childless, these lands reverted to the Crown. Walter Curry, in 1342, has a gift of money for his share in the taking of Edinburgh Castle, from Edward Baliol's party, and was afterwards one of the custumars of Edinburgh. George Corry of Kelwood sat in parliament 1572 that place had
prisoner in England
;
;
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
335
long been the seat of the family, and Corries of ^Newbie and of Knock Sir George, last of Kelwood, was dead in figure in the fifteenth century. 1675, leaving a son George Corrie. The surname, taken from the lands and parish of Corrie in Dumfriesshire, is common in the district. James Corrie was several times Provost of Dumfries, 17 18 to 1734, and left descendants landowners in the county.
In Scotland no arms are registered by any person of the name, but England Sir Frederick Currie, baronet, date of creation 1846, whose family was settled in Berwickshire for several generations, was allowed gules, a saltire couped argent in chief a rose of the last barbed and seeded in
—
proper.
The Earl of Belmore in Ireland descended from John Corry, a native of Scotland who settled at Belfast early in the seventeenth century, bears gules, a saltire argent, in chief a rose or. Douglas. Sixteen coats, of which only one has the heart crowned, viz., Douglas of Halloway (?) ermine, a man's heart crowned with an on a chief of the second three mullets argent. antique crown gules three Douglas, argent, piles sable issuing from a chief gules charged with a heart between two mullets of the field. *Davidsone of old. See W. Adam fiz Dauid of Forfarshire, and Johan le fiz Dauid of Berwickshire in 1296, swore fealty to Edward I. 1340 William, son of David, was Provost of Aberdeen 1360 John, son of David, bailie of Peebles; 1379 John, son of David, bailie of Perth; these are merely quoted without any belief that the surname became In 1360 Adam Davyson hereditary in the families of their descendants. merchant and burgess of Edinburgh has an English safe-conduct. Auchinhamper, co. Aberdeen, was the property of a family of the name in the fifteenth century, and in the same shire were Davidsons of
—
—
;
;
Newton, Tillimorgan, Carnbrogie, &c. Alexander Davidson of Newton assumed the surname and arms of Gordon of Gight, and this line ended in an heiress, mother of Lord Byron arms azure, on a fess engrailed between three pheons argent a buck's head erased of the field. Mr Alexander of Carnbrogie, advocate, registered azure, on a fess couped argent between three pheons or a buck couchant gules George of Carnbrogie d.s.p. 1722, and his sister and heir, Marjory of Carnbrogie, married first, William Thain of Blackball secondly, Alexander Gordon of Auchreddy. Sir William Davidson of Curriehill, in Mid-Lothian, Conservator of the Scottish privileges in the Low Countries, was created a baronet, and azure, on a fess argent between three pheons registered arms, 1672-78 Sir William, who belonged to a or a buck couchant gules attired sable. family of Edinburgh merchants, died before 1685 his daughter and heir, Anne of Curriehill, married Mynheer Francis Vanderburgh of Dort. Walter Davidson was prior of Pittenweem 1480, Patrick represented Linlithgow in parliament 1488, Laurence sat for Sanquhar 1643-49, and Robert for Dundee 1644-49. Robert of Balgay, near Dundee, registered arms 1672-78 Robert, a bailie of Dundee, lost his life in the defence of the Davidsons were for several the town against the English 1651
—
;
—
;
—
;
—
;
;
;
generations a leading burgess family there. The Rev. Thomas Davidson of Dundee,
4Q
had
a
son William,
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
336
merchant in Rotterdam, who purchased Muirhouse, co. Edinburgh, 1776, and had a grant of arms 1786—azure, on a chevron or between two stars in chief and a pheon in base, argent a fleur-de-lis gules ; the last allusive to a traditional descent from a Frenchman, who came to Scotland in the retinue of Queen Magdalene. There are in France several noble families of the name of David and Davy, and if similarity of arms can be founded on, the Davy de Cussd, in the Isle of France, may be the line to which this Scottish branch belongs they bear azure, a chevron between two Mr Davidson had a Royal stars in chief and an ear of grain in base or. warrant, in 1786, for supporters two griffins proper, and he died without issue in September 1794; he had two brothers and one sister, Mary, who ;
—
—
married first, Thomas Eliot of Chapelhill, co. Peebles, solicitor to Frederick Prince of Wales, and had one son, Sir John Eliot, baronet, M.D. secondly, Rev, Thomas Randall of Stirling, and had, with other issue. Rev. Thomas, D.D., one of the ministers of Edinburgh, who in compliance with the terms of his uncle's entail, assumed the surname and arms of Davidson only, and had the supporters confirmed to him in 1795. Muirhouse remains the property of his representative. The Davidsons in Roxburghshire seem to have formed a small clan the chief family was seated in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries at Samieston, and became extinct on the death of James Davidson of that ;
;
place,
whose four nieces were
his coheirs 1670.
of Roxburghshire, and Huwe Dounum, parson of Liberton, co. Lanark, signed the Ragman Roll in 1296. In 1299 Alan de Denvme has an obligation from John, lord of Dunsyer, in Lanarkshire. Denholm is a parish in Dumfriesshire, in which county there were landowners of the name in the fifteenth century. Porteus gives the blazon gules, a chevron between three cranes' heads couped argent, but the arms registered, 1672-78, by William of Westshield, co. Lanark, correspond in tincture with those here given. Symon Denham inherited Westshield from his maternal grandfather, John Liddaill, in or shortly before 1506; his last descendant in the direct male line, William, added to the estate, and acquired the supehe was appointed Master of riority, was forfeited 1685 and restored 1690 the Mint, and represented the county of Lanark in parliament. baronetcy was conferred on him in 1693, with remainder to his heirs male and assignees, and in 171 1 Sir William executed two deeds of entail of his estate of Westshield, with the title of baronet, and of all his other means and estate heritable and moveable, on certain of the descendants of
*Denham.
Gwy
de
Denum
—
;
The
A
descended, in conformity with this arrangement, to members of the families of Baillie of Hardington and Lockhart of Waygateshaw, and probably became extinct on the death of Sir William LockThis gentleman left the estate to hart-Denham of Westshield in 1776. Sir James Steuart of Coltness, who assumed the additional surname and arms of Denham, and in 18 10 his son, Sir James Steuart Denham, baronet, was allowed two cranes proper as supporters. *DuNNiNG OF Miller. Robert Donyng was seven times provost of Perth 1472-92, Robert of Dunning sat in parliament 1471-82. John Donyng, burgess of Glasgow, was a member of a committee of parliament
his sisters.
title
1644.
was a thanage at a very early period Anechol, Bryce, and Gilmech, thanes of Dunning, are repeatedly named Dunning,
in
Perthshire,
;
OF CHARLES US REIGN,
Z2>7
and there were ecclesiastics of the name in John was vicar of Perth in the reign of James
in the Cartulary of Inchafifray,
Perthshire afterwards ; Mr Miller probably stands for Mailer in that county. Alexander Dunning of Corrie Wester, co. Perth, was grandfather of Mr Alexander Dunning of Corrie Wester, minister of Abernethy 16911719, several of whose descendants held the estate in succession. Thomas Dunning, of Castle Sprutings, was dead without issue in 1780, when his cousin, John Campbell of Saffronhall in Lanarkshire, was II.
his heir.
*Dawson. The accounts
of the Lord
High Treasurer contain
notices
of James Dawson, his wife, and his son James, who was godson of James At that time, and on to the end of the following century, IV., 1494-98. of held land in the barony of Restalrig. the name persons DuDiNGSTONE OF Sandford, Fife. Gules, a chevron between three cross crosslets fitchee argent. L. gives Dudingstone of South House, near Edinburgh. The seal of Andrew of South House, 1579, is a chevron between three mascles, on a chief as many mullets. The crosses are or in the entry in the Lyon Register 1672-78, by James of Sandford ; latterly this family assumed as supporters two
greyhounds.
The name
is that of a locality near Edinburgh, and Eleyne de Dudof that swore dynggeston, John county, fealty to Edward I. in 1296. had a from Robert charter, I., of the lands of Pitcorthie in Dodingstoun Richard and Thomas de Dodingston occur in some Fife, near Sandford. of the earliest of the Newbotle charters. In May 1290 Edward I. grants a protection against proceedings for debts to William de Dodingstone, burgess of Edinburgh. Dalrymple of Laclaid. Argent, on a cross engrailed sable nine mascles of the first also, or, a saltire engrailed sable charged with nine mascles argent, for Stairs. *Dalgarno of Garniestoune. William of Dalgarnock, Abbot of Kelso 1329, was preceptor of David II. at Chateau Gaillard. John of Dalgarnock was customar of Arbroath 1359 in 13 12 Thomas of Dalgernoc is named in the Cartulary of Arbroath. Mr William of Dalgarnock, Canon of Brechin, Provost of St Andrews, and Envoy to France and England, lived in the latter part of the fourteenth century. 1417, Jdhn de Dalgarnowch, lord of Fyntrie these lands came to be called Dalgarno-Fintray, and the family took the designation of Dalgarno of that ;
;
;
Ilk.
In 1400 and
1402 William Dalgarno of Fintray acquired Blackwater, from the heirs of Adam Pyngyl. John de Dalgarnock resigned Wester Essintoley, co. Kincardine, which was granted by Robert II. in the third year of his reign, to John Eraser. In 1390 Patrick de Dalgarnok is one of the heirs named in a charter of some lands of Innerdovat in Fife, to his brother Patrick Forrester. William was of that Ilk 1603, and John of Auchmunil, William of Blackwater, and William of Garniston figure in the Aberdeenshire lists 1643-61.
The
of Pollable Persons in Aberdeenshire, 1696, contains four landowners of the name one of them left descendants who still possessed the estate of Millhill nearly to the close of last century. list
;
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
338
This surname
Dalgleish.
is
taken from Dalgleish in the parish
of Rankilburn, co. Selkirk. Symon of Dalgleish witnessed a charter of the Duke of Albany son and heir of 1407; John of Dalgleish had a remission 1494; John, the late John of Dalgleish, 1495. branch possessed Deuchar in the same county, for several
A younger
about 1620.
generations, till The Dalgleishes figure constantly in the records as disturbers of the in 1510 for being concerned in the burning of peace; John was hanged Branxholm and other offences; in 1567 George, a servant of the Earl of Bothwell, suffered the same death, as being accessory to the murder of
King Henry.
before 1630, Dalgleish seems to have ceased to belong to the family The Fife. in of lands the west but a branch had previously acquired arms here represented are allowed in Funeral Escutcheons to Robert Clark of the Dalgleish designed of that Ilk (?), who married Margaret their son James, by Ann, daughter of Alexander Pittencrieff family Meiklejohn of Parkhill, was father of Mr Robert Dalgleish, advocate. Clerk to the General Assembly 1638, agent for the Church of Scotland, and solicitor to Charles II. He married Jean, daughter of Douglas of Pompherston, and their arms impaled are cut in stone at Lauriston, co. Edinburgh, an estate acquired by him c. 1655. Mr Robert Dalgleish died in 1662, leaving an only child Margaret, wife of Ludovick Craig of Riccarton ; in 1683 she and her son Thomas Craig of Riccarton sold Lauriston. Mr William Dalgleish, brother of Mr Robert, was minister of Cramond, the parish in which the estate of Lauriston is situated, married Elizabeth, sister of the first Lord Colville of Ochiltree, and left descendants, several of whom, were clergymen. They intermarried with Campbell of Auchlyne, Stewart of Nevvhalls, Ogilvie of Inchmartine, Makgill of Kemback, &c., and possessed the estates of Scotscraig in Fife, and ;
Riddoch
in Stirlingshire.
In 1748 Rev. William of Scotscraig, registered arms as borne by Dalgleish of Lauriston William Ogilvy Dalgleish, Esq., is head of the family, and the Riddoch branch is represented by George Kellie-M'Callum of Braco. On a stone on a house at Dunfermline is a shield, with the date the date is that of the destruction 1624, May 25th, and initials M. R. D. which another was built soon after, on the site of by fire of an old house, and this stone formed part of the latter building. The arms are a tree eradicated in pale between three pheons fessways, one on the dexter and two on the sinister side, their points to the dexter. stone, with the date 1609 and initials S. D., on a house in the High Street, Dunfermline, has a shield a bendlet between six pheons or arrows, two, three, and one in chief, points upwards, and a bird in base, a star in chief, perhaps as a ;
;
A
—
mark of cadency. The author of the arms of Dury,
"
" Annals of Dunfermline supposes these to be the to which they bear no resemblance there can be no doubt that they were put up by members of the family of Dalgleish, to which the solicitor to the king belonged. Dawlyne. Gules, three crosses argent. *Dempster of Muiresk. Also Dempster of old as the first quarter. ;
OF CHARLES
L'S
REIGN.
339
Seal of William Dempster of Caraldstone 1561, a lion rampant. Seal in 1592 of Thomas of Auchterless, first and fourth, a lion rampant; second and third, a bar surmounted of a sword paleways, point downwards. Seal of John Dempster of Balrowny 1607, first and fourth, a sword bendways, point downwards surmounted of a fess second and The arms here shown were registered third, a lion rampant contournd. in 1673 by John Dempster of Pitliver, co. Fife, as " representer of the familie of Muiresk." He was knighted, married Jean, daughter of Erskine of Balgownie, and died 2nd May 1704; had two children, Captain John Dempster, fiar of Pitliver, who d.s.p., and Jean, who married Sir James Campbell, second baronet of Aberuchill, and died in April 1703; her eldest son sold Pitliver. In Douglas' "Baronage" there is a pedigree of Dempster which is inaccurate, and entirely differs from the account given in the Funeral Entry of Mrs Jean Campbell Sir John's mother is there stated to have been daughter of Sir John Preston of Valleyfield and Grizel Colville, and his father's mother to have been a daughter of James Henderson of Fordell and Jean Murray. The whole pedigree in the " Baronage " is grounded on the mistake of making Caraldstone and Auchterless one family, they being quite disin the cartulary of Brechin the heads of the two families are tinct several times named in the same deed, 1362, Robert Demstar, bailie of Forfar; 1360, Andrew Dempster makes a gift from his lands of Menmuir to the priory of Restennot. Robert H., in the ninth year of his reign, grants the office of dempster of ;
;
;
parliament and in justice aires, &c., to
and
Andrew Dempster, /^^(/i?;^
nosier,
his heirs. 1370, charter of the office of
dempster by the Abbot of Arbroath to 1460, David of Caraldstone and David, his eldest son, resign that office into the hands of the Abbot of Arbroath Robert of Caraldstone dempster of parliament 1469. Robert of Caraldstone sat in parliament 1491 Alexander, in 1476, was dempster of parliament John of Caraldstone and Margaret Scrym-
Andrew Dempster dominus de Caraldstone; ;
;
;
geour, his spouse, 1476-84; Peter of Caraldstone, his son, married Janet Ochterlony in or before 1500; William of Caraldstone, his son, 1544. William of Caraldstone, 1574, seems to have been the last of the family, in 1606 his grandsons, William Ochterlony and Charles Lin, wfere served heirs-portioners general to him. Of the Auchterless and Muiresk line were Walter, 1429-34 David,
and
;
John, 1469-97; John, 1530-53, and Margaret 1443-57; Walter, 1461 son James, 1564-83; his son Thomas, 1589, his their Stewart, spouse; was beheaded at Edinburgh for forgery in April 1620; he married Jean Leslie, and had issue, Robert, Thomas, and George, all named in a charter of the barony of Auchterless-Dempster, 1592, the heirs next in succession being John of Knockleith, Archibald of Halsewallis, and Charles of Barrane (? Balrowny). Mr John of Logic Altoun, advocate, acquired lands in the west of Fife, and was ancestor of Pitliver; he was dead in 1622, leaving issue; Margaret, heiress of Logic, married in 1704 David Carnegie of Craigo. Mr John Dempster, minister of Monifieth 1676-1708, who had been previously schoolmaster at Brechin, registered arms, c. 1680, the same as ;
4R
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
340
—
Sir John within a bordure, parted per pale argent and sable ; he was ancestor of the Dempsters of Dunnichen and Skibo. Thomas Dempster, the historian, who was born 1579, and died 1625 at Bologna, where he was a professor, belonged to the Muiresk family. *DuGUiD OF AucHiNHUiF. Francis of Auchinhuif registered 1672-78 Porteus gives argent, three crosses azure, three crosses patee argent.
—
—
patee azure.
John Dogod, 1365; John Dogude,
bailie of Perth,
1379; Robert
Duguid, 1406. Elizabeth of Balcarne, heiress of Balcarne, Auchinhuif, Warthill, &c., was mother of Robert Duguid of Auchinhuif 1470-1500. The estate was erected into a barony by Crown charter 1643, in Robert of Auchinhuif married in 1699 favour of William Duguid. Theresa, daughter of Patrick Leslie of Balquhain, and their son succeeded to the estates of his mother's family. •Donaldson. The Lyon Register contains ten entries of arms for this name from 1672 onwards, all but one bearing the eagle and lymphad of Macdonald, and in some cases a descent from the Glencoe family being stated.
The
—
a dean of guild of Brechin argent, a galley with her oars in saltire within a bordure wavy azure. He is probably the David Donaldson who sat in parliament for that burgh 1644-52, 1678-81. Porteus' MS. gives argent, a lymphad oars in saltire sable there is added in a later hand, surmounted of an eagle displayed, and in the dexter (chief?) a hand couped at the wrist gules. In the Lyon Register the field is or, and the eagle, which has two heads, is sable or proper. In 1642 a Litera Prosapice, under the Great Seal, was issued Alexander Donaldson, M.D., son of Walter, Professor of Philosophy at Sedan, tracing his descent through five generations from Donald Donaldson of Essilmond, designed baron, and Isabella Hay, his wife, of the noble family of Errol. *Fythie of Boysack. About 1680 Henry Fithie, heir- male of that ^azure, a crane proper. family, late provost of Arbroath, registered Porteus gives this, making the crane argent and another blazon ^gules, a crane passant, a cross coupd fitch6e in his tail, and a chief argent charged with three stars of the first. Henry of Fithie, one of the commissioners sent by Robert I. to David of Fothy, custumar of inquire into the privileges of Arbroath. Aberdeen 1332, Eustace of Futhes, a collector of contributions in Aberdeenshire 1373, William de Fethy in 1365, had an English safe-conduct. 1413, Laurence of Fithy; 1450, Henry Fethy of Boysack; 1510, exception
is
—
;
—
;
—
of Boysack; 1527, Henry of Boysack and Helen Straton, his spouse their sons, Alexander and David ; Elizabeth, daughter and heir of John, representative of Boysack, married John Elliot of Peebles; 1527, David of Inchcok 1514, David of Cookston 1531, Duncan of Cookston. John Fithie, merchant burgess of Dundee, and Margaret Strachan, his spouse, had a charter of the lands of Benvie and Balruddery 1654 and in 1665 he presented a communion bread plate to the church of Dundee, on which his arms are engraved a crane pierced by a sword and three stars in (? on a) chief. Henry Fithie represented the burgh of Arbroath in parliament
Henry
;
;
;
;
—
1667-73.
OF CHARLES LS REIGN. *Fletcher.
341
Porteus gives this for Fletcher of Innerpeffer it was registered 1672-78 by Andrew of Salton, with two griffins proper as supat the same time by his uncle, Sir Andrew of Aberlady, with a Corters ordure engrailed argent; and in 1763 by Robert of Balinshoe, a cadet, with a crescent gules for difference. Sir Andrew of Innerpeffer was a senator of the College of Justice ;
;
1623-50, represented the shire of Angus in parliament, and acquired the barony of Salton from Lord Abernethy of Salton. Robert Fletcher represented the burgh of Dundee in parliament another James repre1596, and James sat for the same place 1639-41 sented the burgh 1 685-1 701. The same arms are cut on the monument in Melrose Abbey of David Fletcher, Bishop of Argyle, who died in 1665 his brother, Sir John was ;
;
Lord Advocate 1661, acquired New Cranston, co. Edinburgh. They were sons of Andrew, merchant in Dundee. William of New Cranston, advocate, died in June 1685, and his eldest daughter, Elizabeth, wife of Sir John Dalrymple of Cousland, baronet, left a son who inherited the estate, and in 1720 registered arms, quartering Fletcher without any
mark of cadency.
of Aberlady, died 1710, when his three aunts succeeded to the estates ; Margaret, wife of John Lamb, merchant in Haddington, was the only one who left issue her daughter married Alexander Hepburn of the Monkrig family. Robert first of the Balinshoe line, married the daughter and co-heir of Sir Thomas Ogilvy, who was killed at Inverlochy in 1645, by Patricia, his wife, daughter, and co-heir of Patrick Ruthven, Earl of Forth and Brentford their descendants possessed the barony of Woodwrae, Craignathro, Lindertis, &c., in Forfarshire, and became extinct about 18 10. The Saltoun family, to which belonged Andrew the patriot, who died in 17 16, and Andrew Lord Milton, Lord Justice Clerk, who died 1766, is
Andrew,
last
;
;
still
represented there.
from the coat which is given in W. and other MSS., and seems to have been founded on that of an English family, from which descent has been asserted. It does not seem necessary to go to Cumberland, or elsewhere in England, for accounts differ, for an ancestor, as the name is met with in Forfarshire from an early period in Funeral Entries the mother of Lord Innerpeffer is given as Anna Finlasoune, which at that time was the name of a leading burgess family in Dundee.
The arms
differ
;
1374, Hugh Flesher, burgess of Forfar; 1482, Malcolm Fleschar, citizen of Brechin 1497, Robert Flescher, chaplain there; 1500, Mr John Flescheour, vicar of Kirriemuir; 1527, tack of half Baldovie to John Fleschar and Elizabeth Ogilvy, his spouse, and his son, Alexander; 1566, Robert Flescher in Brechin. The name is said to mean a maker of arrows, and a pheon is the bearing of several families of the name in ;
England. In the arms granted in 1777 to Angus Fletcher of Dunans, Argyllshire, whose ancestors had long been resident in Glenorchy, two quivers filled with arrows are substituted for the second and third escallops borne with the cross flory, and the crest is two arms shooting an arrow from a bow. Fairbairne; argent, on a chevron sable between three boars' heads
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
342
couped gules are increscent between two mullets of the the third two spurs of the first. Fairbairn of
West Gordon
in the sixteenth
first,
on a chief of
and seventeenth
centuries.
Robert Frebern witnessed a charter of Serlo, clericus Regis Scocie to the Abbey of Kelso, c. 1 170. Roger, son of Robert Frebern, is a witness c. 1280, to a grant to the same house. The arms granted to Sir William and Sir Peter Fairbairn, descendants of a Roxburghshire family are founded on the above. Frier. Or, a garb between three morions azure, between two This is also given flaunches gules each charged with a garb of the first.
MS.
in Porteus'
Another coat
—
given first, argent, a rose gules barbed vert second, argent, a cinquefoil gules third, argent, a cross Alexander of Invercrosslet fitchee sable; fourth, argent, a tree proper. cauld registered 1672-78 first, or, a lion rampant gules second, argent, a sinister hand in pale couped at the wrist gules third, or, a galley sable; crest a lion holding a dagger in fourth, argent, a fir tree slipped vert " I force no friend, I fear no foe." his dexter hand proper; motto These arms were altered in 1697 by patent in favour of John of Invercauld first and fourth, or, a lion rampant gules armed and langued azure second and third, argent, a fir tree seeded growing out of a mount in base proper, on a chief gules a banner of Scotland displayed or, a canton of the first charged with a dexter hand couped at the wrist fessways holding a dagger point downwards of the second. The lion in the
*Farquharson.
is
;
;
—
;
—
;
—
;
;
;
" Fide et fortitudiney the motto altered to Nisbet adds as supporters two wild cats proper, which were allowed in 1815 to Mrs Catherine Farquharson of Invercauld. Foord of Old. Argent, a fess gules, in chief a crescent azure between two mullets of the second and in base a martlet of the third. Gordon of Gight. The quartered coat of Huntly with an inescutcheon gules in the centre. Porteus gives for this family the Huntly coat within a bordure quarterly or and gules. When George Gordon of Gight, paternally Davidson, registered arms 1775 he dropped the quarterings and bore azure, a star argent between three boars heads couped or, crest
is
made gules and
quarterly with Davidson.
*Grahame of Morphie. Seal of John de Grame 1370, a chevron between three escallops. Seal of Henry Grehem of Comieston, i486, the same with a mullet on the chevron. Sir James Balfour gives for Morphie sable, a chevron argent and bordered as the first with a mullet the same voided of charged between three escallops of the second. The arms registered, 1733, by
—
—
Captain Francis Graham, heir-male of Morphie, are as here represented with supporters, two savages wreathed about the head and middle In 1680 Robert Grahame, citizen of London and tailor to His proper. " Majesty, lineally and lawfully descended of the house and family of recorded the coat with a rose gules, barbed vert on the Morphie," chevron, probably allusive to his prosperity as a tailor in England while the crest, a blade of thistle and a fig leaf in saltire proper, and motto, " Hinc decus inde tegmen,^' have also an unmistakable meaning. A seal of Alexander Graham, 1537, has a chevron with one escallop in base and two on a chief. Nisbet says the Morphie branch of the Grahams dates from the ;
OF CHARLES reign of Robert
L'S
REIGN.
Graham
343
of Morphie 1398 Robert of Morphia sat in parliament 1560, and Sir Robert of Morphie represented the shire of Kincardine 1617. This old knightly and baronial family, after intermarrying with the Earl of Angus, Arbuthnott of that Ilk, Burnett of Leys, Irvine of Drum, Earl of Southesk, Viscount Dundee, &c., ended in Captain Francis Graham of Morphie, who died without issue, leaving the estate by entail 1743, in which no persons of his own name are mentioned, to his relative, ex parte matris, William Barclay of Balmakewan, who assumed the surname of Grahame, and was great-grandfather of the present Francis James Barclay Grahame of Morphie. *Gairdine of Barrowfield. The next coat is Gairdine of Leyis argent, a boar's head erased sable between three cross crosslets fitchde azure then Gairden of that Ilk sable, a boar's head erased argent langued gules. Seal of Walter Gardyn 1534 on a chevron between three boars' heads erased a mullet between two crosses patde seal of David Gardyn 1565 parted per fess, in chief a boar's head erased between two mullets, in base two cross crosslets fitchde. See F. for a different coat Sir James Balfour makes this argent, a chevron surmounted of another engrailed gules. Arms were registered, 1672-78, by John Gairden of that Ilk, argent, a boar's head erased sable armed or; Mr William, representer of Burrow" field as here represented, his motto being yive le Roy Alexander of a boar's head armed crest a erased sable boar passant Troup or, gules ; '^ Vires animat virtus;'^ no supporters, although a argent; motto boar argent and a lion proper have latterly been assumed by his descendants and Mr James, minister at Balmerino, descended of the family of Lees argent, a boar's head erased sable between three cross crosslets fitchde gules, a bordure counter compony of the second and first. He was afterwards Professor of Divinity at St Andrews and King's College, Aberdeen, and died 1726 in his eightieth year, having had nine children On the monualive in 1696, so representatives of this family may exist. his widow Isobel Mr erected Middleton ment of his father, Alexander, by a boar's head in chief and three cross crosslets 1674, the arms are fitchde in base. David of Leys 1528-50; David of Leys 1558-69; David of Leys, in 1600, had a son. The Ragman Roll, 1296, was signed by William de Gardyn, Willia'm Gardeyn of the county of Forfar, and William du Gardyn of the county of Edinburgh. David in 1407 had a crown charter of Kyninmouth and other lands in Banffshire in the elder line were Patrick of that Ilk 1434 ; Patrick of that Ilk 1457-78; John of that Ilk 1488; Patrick of that Ilk 1531 ; Patrick of that Ilk was shot by William Guthrie of Ravensbie 1578 his About this time son, Mr David of that Ilk, was served heir to him 1588. the lands, from which the family took their name, passed from their possession, and in 1604 were, Mr Jervise says, held by the Rollos. In 1607 Mr Robert Gardyne, younger of Blairtoun, prosecutes the murderer of his chief, so it is probable that Mr David was then dead, leaving a son under age, who may be the Robert Gardyne, oye to the In 1587 Alexander Guthrie of that Ilk defunct, who prosecutes in 1610. was killed by Thomas Gardyne of Bandoch, afterwards of Leggatston, against whom proceedings were taken in 1596 and 1610 ; he was dead in I.
;
Gilbert
;
—
—
—
—
—
;
;
—
—f
—
— ;
—
;
;
4s
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
344
served heir to him in parts of the barony of Gardyne, including Middleton. Middleton, and these other lands, now belong to the senior coheir-general of the Gardynes of Latoun, who however acquired them by purchase at a much later date. At Gardyne there is a stone with the date 1568 arms, a boar's head
when
1619,
his son
—
Thomas was
—
"
at Middleton on a stone, with motto erased Speravi in te Domine ;'' " the initials D. G., 1692, is the motto, hoip is only in the Lord." " ;
My
Jervise's Epitaphs."
A difficult
question is, who was the John of that Ilk who registered " Cruciata cruce junguntur" Could he the arms 1672-78 his motto is be a landless representative of the direct line, or John of Latoun or Lawton, who is so designed in the Acts of Parliament 1661-90, but who had acquired in 1682 a part of Gardyne, to which other parts were added by ;
purchase sixty years later ? George of Latoun, 1600, is the first of this branch I have met with ; James of Latoun took the designation of Middleton about the middle of last century; Thomas, last of Middleton, died unm. in 1841, and was succeeded by his nephew, William Bruce, who assumed the surname of his mother's family. very irregular entry was made in the Lyon of the arms of Gardyne of Middleton without about 1804, Register, Christian name, crest, or motto or, two chevrons engrailed gules between three boars' heads erased sable. Alexander de Gardyne had a charter of Barrowfield, co. Forfar, 1408; John is styled dominus de Barowfeld 1434 the laird fell at the battle of Arbroath 1442; William of Barrowfield 1483; John of Barrowfield 1508; William of Barrowfield, grandfather of Alexander, who sold Mr William representer c. 1672 (?) the Mr William the estate 1615 licensed Gardyne, by the presbytery of Arbroath, who was minister of the Tolbooth Church, Edinburgh 1668 till 1689, when he was deprived; he In 1733 married, in 1671, Barbara Guthrie and died 1708, leaving issue. " Vires Animat virtus,'' and quartering the same coat, with the motto Guthrie, was recorded by Captain John Gardyne descended of Burrowfield. In the sixteenth century there were Gardynes of Cononsyth and Gar-
A
—
;
;
dynes of Blackford, the latter ending in an heiress, Marjory Gardyne 1662 Gardynes of Tilliefroskie in the seventeenth century, and Gardynes of Midstrath, of whom descendants are said to exist in Norfolk. ;
In Edinburgh a burgess family of good position in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, ended in John of Greenhill and Nether Luggate, who d.s.p. 1707 his nephew and heir, Adam Fairholme of Greenhill, near Edinburgh, was, in 1751, allowed to quarter argent, a boar's head erased sable armed or. The principal family of the name existing is represented in the male line by Francis William Garden-Campbell of Troup, co. Banff, and Glenlyon, CO. Perth. John of Laithers or Durlaithers 1505; Alexander of Laithers 1533 George of Durlaithers bought Banchory c. 1555, married Isabel, daughter of Keith of Troup Arthur of Banchory married Elizabeth, daughter of Gordon of Gight, and was dead in 1606 Alexander of Banchory 1606, sold it in 1624, and was dead in 1639 his son Captain George, then in Germany, obtained a birthbrief 25th October 1639. Major Alexander Garden, of the Swedish service, bought Troup c.
—
;
;
;
;
;
1655,
and was dead
served heir to him.
in
1662,
when
his son,
who
registered arms,
was
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
345
In the " Landed Gentry," the Major is called son of the last laird of Mr Marryat, in his valuable notices of Scottish Families Banchory settled in Sweden, mentions only a Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Gairden of the Leys family, who was recognised as noble in 1650, married and ;
had
issue.
Francis Garden of Delgaty, inherited Troup in 1793, on the death of Lord Gardenstone, and Glenlyon 1806, from his granduncle David Campbell, whose surname he assumed.
his uncle, Francis
*GovANE.
These arms were allowed,
in 1747, to Alexander Gavine, of obscure origin notices of his family are contained in " Jervise's Epitaphs." His son, David of Langton, married first, Christina Maria Hearsay, and had a daughter, who died in 1765 ; secondly. Lady Elizabeth Maitland, and had Mary Turner Gavin of Langton, Marchioness of Breadalbane, Christina Maria Hearsay Gavin of Easter Brakie, Mrs Baird of Newbyth, and two others who died unm. The seal of Alexander Gawensone, 1536, has a saltire between a mullet in chief and a spear head in base. Govane is a surname taken from a parish near Glasgow, where, in 1283, Christian, widow of Symon de Govane, held lands. About 1325 John de Govane, burgess of Glasgow, made a gift to the Preaching Friars there, and John de Govane was prior of their house in Glasgow 1447-56, as was Patrick de Govane 1471-76. Lawrence of Govane was sheriff of Peebles 1359, and of Roxburgh 1373 held part of Easter Hope Kailzie, near Peebles David H., in the forty-first year of his reign, confirms a charter of William Earl of Douglas to Lawrence de Govane of the lands of Pollynfeych in Lanarkshire 1393, he has a pension of ;^ioo from Robert II. ; 1365-69-72, English safe-conducts are granted to John Goven, a merchant, James de Govane, clerk, and John de Govane, also clerk, who was about to study at Oxford. Persons of the name long held land near Glasgow, and figure as
merchant
in
Montrose, a
man
—
—
;
;
;
notaries, burgesses, writers, &c., there. In Peeblesshire also they flourished for centuries; in 1476 John held In 1491 John had part of Hope Kailzie, probably as heir of the sheriff. promised to pay for masses at the altar of St Bride for five years, for the
soul of William Myddilmast, slain by him, probably one of the family of Myddilmast of Grieston, near Peebles. William had a charter of Cardrona, which marches with Hope Kailzie, in 1534; John of Cardrona was killed before September 1601, by John Scott, brother of Scott of Tushilaw ; John of Cardrona 1616-24, was father of Mr John, whose son, William, served heir in 1667, and sold the estate in 1685, with consent of his son John. in parliament 1685-86, for the burgh of Peebles, and in John sat " Chambers' Peeblesshire," William Govane of Hawkshaw, who died in is said to have been the last of. the family in that county. 1819, There was Govanes of Boquhapple, of Cameron, of Drumquhassel, but none of these families entered arms. Gavine or Gavin was a common name among gypsies in Scotland, " and in the " Criminal Trials a letter is printed, written in 1506, by James IV. to the King of Denmark, in favour of Anthony Gavin, Earl of Little
Egypt.
Home of Fast
Castle.
Home
quartering Pepdie, over
all
on an
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
346
Porteus blazons escutcheon of pretence, argent, a castle triple towered. the castle gules. *HoppER. Porteus gives this coat and also argent, three roses This is the name of a burgess family of good standing in Edingules. the beginning of the fifteenth century from they intermarried burgh, Bellenden of with Murray of Blackbarony, Auchinoule, Rigg of Carberry, &c. In 1502 Richard, burgess of Edinburgh, founds a chaplainry in the church of St Giles, masses to be sung for the souls of himself, Elizabeth Hiltsoun his wife, his children, and ancestors; and in 1527 his son. Sir Robert, prebendary of St Giles, makes a similar foundation for the souls Richard's descendants possessed the estate of his late father and mother. of Bourhouse, near Dunbar, for several generations, the last notice of them I have met with being in 1682. Hadine of that Ilk. Or, two lions passant gardant gules. HoMELL. Argent, a bend gules between a crescent in chief of the second and a fleur-de-lis azure in base. *Hervey of Alick, or Elrick. Arms registered 1672-78, by James Hervey of Broadley azure, on a bend or three trefoils vert. Porteus gives Hervie of Alrik gules, a fess or between two stars in chief and a mascle of the second Hervie azure, a fess and in chief two martlets argent also gules, on a bend argent three trefoils proper also azure, a fess between two martlets in chief and a Catherine wheel in base argent. Arms in Kintore church 1653 a fess countercompony between three cinquefoils in chief and a mascle in base. family much connected with the church in the Diocese of Aberdeen ; he made 1406, Mr Henry Hervy, precentor of the Cathedral Church to church another Mr of the rings, &:c., Henry Hervy, precentor gifts 1453-82 1427, Duncan, prebendary of Forres Duncan was at the battle of Harlaw before 1412 Duncan Hervie had married the daughter of Patrick Baxter, with whom he acquired lands in Futye 1487, Duncan lands in held lands; 1546, Sir David held Futye; 1438, Henry, archdeacon of Moray. Mr John was rector of the University of Paris, rector of Benholm, and made gifts to the University of Aberdeen before 1542. Mr James of Boyndis married about 1540, Agnes, daughter of John Leslie of Balquhain. Mr James of Elrick was dead 1613; Andrew 1613 James in Elrick 1619, heir to his grandfather, Mr James of Boyndis Gilbert of Elrick, merchant burgess of Aberdeen, was dead in 1657, leaving Thomas of
—
;
—
—
—
;
;
—
—
;
—
A
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Elrick.
In
1
57 1 the Bishop of Aberdeen granted a feu-charter of the lands of
Mamewlach, 1663;
Mr
to
Mr Henry Hervy
Robert of Mamewlach
Mr James of Mamewlach of Boyndis 1679, died 1696; William of Mamew;
lach 1706.
There were other landowners of the name in Aberdeenshire, and a branch long settled at Inverurie, of whom, Alexander represented that burgh in parliament 1617. In Edinburgh Thomas was a baillie 1492 Mr Thomas, an advocate about the end of the sixteenth century; William represented Edinburgh ;
James, surgeon to Queen Anne, died in 1614. HoRSEBURCH OF THAT Ilk. Symone de Horsbroc witnessed a charter of William Purves to the monks of Melrose c. 1245 William de in parliament
1584
;
;
OF CHARLES
L'S
REIGN.
347
Horsebroch, clerk of the Dean and Chapter of Glasgow, 1283; William Ostherebure (?), of the county of Roxburgh, signed the Ragman Roll 1296 William de Horsbrok was bailie of Peebles 1326 Mr Michael of Horsbrok, about the same time, witnesses a charter William de Orseburg held lands at Berwick in the reign of David II. In the fifteenth century, Robert Horsbruk was sub-prior of St Andrews. The lands of Horsbrugh on the Tweed, three miles below Peebles, have remained in the possession of a family of the same name certainly for upwards of six centuries. Alexander of that Ilk, married Jean, eldest ;
;
;
daughter and coheir of William Lord Hay of Yester, and their son, Alexander, inherited part of the property of his mother's family. Alexander of that Ilk, married Margaret Tait, heiress of Pirn, which estate belongs to the present Alexander Horsbrugh of Horsbrugh, who is, however, not a descendant of that marriage. Nisbet gives the arms as azure, a horse's head couped argent crest a horse's head motto " y^gre de tramite recto" A branch, long settled in Fife, is represented by Bethune Horsburgh,
—
;
late of
—
;
Lochmalony.
*Halcro.
Sir James Balfour gives the arms quartered with a fess sable charged with three crescents, probably for Craig. The family was seated in Orkney, and formed several branches, the chief of which possessed property in South Ronaldshay, and their residence being called the House of Halcro, the head of the race was, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, designed Halcro of that Ilk. Duncan Stewart says that a daughter of Robert Earl of Orkney married Halcro of Halcro ; Hugh of that Ilk married Esther Thomson, an heiress, and had Hugh of that Ilk, who died in 1637 his son Hugh of Halcro was dead in 1670, when his sisters, Joan and Sibil, were served ;
heirs-portioners special. Christian, heiress of the Halcros of Houton, seated there for several generations, married before 1624 Alexander Moncrieff, and had issue. The Halcros of Cava and Cowbister, traceable to the beginning of the seventeenth century, ended in William, who died before 1789, leaving his property to his cousin Thomas Sands. In 1567 Mr Magnus Halcro of Burgh, was charged with treason, along with the Earl of Bothwell and others. Patrick, in 1614, was concerned in the rebellion of the Earl of Orkney and his son Robert, but having been instrumental in bringing about the surrender of Kirkwall Castle (Sir Robert Gordon treats him as a traitor), his life was spared.
Hamilton of Bargenie
;
first
and
fourth, gules, a
bend argent
between a cinquefoil in chief and two in base second and third, Arran. mentions the knighting, in 1602, of Sir John of Kincleven, natural son of John Marquess of Hamilton, but gives him the coat of his father His son, Sir John, was created Lord Bargeny, and bore undifferenced. Hamilton and Arran quarterly within a bordure compony argent and azure, the first charged with hearts gules, the second with mullets argent, ;
W.
to indicate his
marriage to Jane, daughter of William Marquess of
Douglas.
Hope
azure, a chevron or between three bezants in chief and one in a canton. See L., where the field is is certainly an addition and there three besants but are this gules, only made to the original MS. ;
in base, the
arms of Nova Scotia
;
4T
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
348
Porteus gives the arms as afterwards borne azure, a chevron or between three besants a chevron between three besants are on the seal of
—
;
"
At spes non fracta" is on a Thomas 1631, and the present motto in 1616 at the Cowgatea house monument with the date 1628. He built head, Edinburgh, and on it was cut, ''At hospes humo" being the anagram of Thomas Houpe. The accounts of the origin of this now numerous and important family Sir
Thomas, the King's advocate, who grandson of Edward Hope, Commissioner to the General Assembly 1560, which is certainly a mistake, as Sir Thomas, in his Diary, calls his grandfather John, but gives
vary,
and are probably
all
Sir
incorrect.
is the real founder, is generally called
information as to his descent. He mentions his brothers William and James, neither of whom married appear in his published pedigrees ; he had another brother, who in France who went to and a son left 1636, and to Henry, Mary Neall, little
Amsterdam in 1641. Sir Thomas' own
daughter of John Bennet, someof times called Binning, portioner Musselburgh, is styled of Wallingford in England, the truth being that her grandfather, Thomas Bennet, lived at Walliford, close to Musselburgh, and the arms given to her in the Funeral Escutcheon are those of the Bennets in Scotland. Sir Thomas' mother is Jacqueline deTot, or Janet Juitot, or Juvitot, the arms in the Funeral Escutcheon being Or, a fess gules fretty of the in a pedigree field between a fleur-de-lis of the second and a torteau compiled in 1767 for Oliver Hope, then resident in France, her nephew is stated to have been killed at the siege of Bar le Due in 1652, being then It was perhaps this French Lieutenant-General in the French service. connection that gave rise to the idea of the Hopes being of that country John is said to have come over in the retinue of Queen Magdalene, to have settled as a merchant in Edinburgh, and to have married Elizabeth Gumming, but a funeral entry names his wife Mary Napier. Sir Thomas had an elder brother Henry, whose mother was, if a Funeral Escutcheon of her granddaughter may be depended on, a lady of the name of Morrison Henry married Katherine, daughter and coheir of Robert Galbraith, merchant burgess of Edinburgh, and had a son, Mr William Houpe, advocate, living 1627, and three daughters, eventually coheirs, who married Sir James Stewart of Coltness James Wylie, wife, Elizabeth,
—
;
;
;
;
merchant
Mr
in
Edinburgh
;
and
Riddell mentions that
Hume, merchant there. Sir Thomas at first bore a mark
of cadency,
1600 designed servitor to Mr John Nicolson he graduated at the University of Edinburgh, 12th August 1592, as Thomas Hoppeaus. It is hardly necessary to cross the Ghannel to find ancestors for the Hopes, as the name is to be met with in Scotland at least as early as 1296, when Johan Hope of Peeblesshire swore fealty to Edward I. at Berwick-
and was
in
on-Tweed
;
name
Tweeddale long after, 1494, John Hop had a 1437, Robert Hope, serjeant in Edinburgh remission at Selkirk; 1529, David Hope was hanged for treason in aiding Archibald Earl of Angus 1552, Edward Houpe, councillor in Edinburgh 1557, John Houp held land in Midlem, eo. Roxburgh. In 1585, six persons of the name of Hoip or Hope, are on the list of his friends in Dumfriesshire, given in by John Earl of Morton. A baronetcy of Nova Scotia was conferred, 19th February 1628, on the
;
occurs
among
residents in
;
;
;
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
349
Mr Thomas Hope of Craighall, co. Fife, King's advocate, the same honour was bestowed on two of his descendants, and in 1703 Charles Hope of Hopetoun was created an Earl. Sir Thomas of Craighall, baronet, registered arms 1672-78, and in 1780 his descendant, Sir Archibald, was allowed as supporters two young ladies, the emblems of Hope, as borne by the ennobled younger branch of
—
his family.
Harper argent, a lion rampant sable in chief a crescent gules. Arms registered 1673 by Sir John Harper of Camnethan, advocate
—
;
argent, a lion rampant sable, holding in his dexter paw a harp azure, a bordure engrailed of the second. The arms of Harper and Harpur in England resemble the Scotch coat.
In 1296, Rogier le Harpur of Hom in Berwickshire, Johan le Harpur of the same county, Witing le Harpur of Lanarkshire, Robert le Harpur of Ayrshire, and William le Harpur of the Lawe, in the county of Edinburgh, did homage to Edward I. ; that king the same year directed the restoration of their lands to several persons named Harper. Robert I. granted charters of lands in East Lothian to Thomas Harper, of lands in Carrick to Patrick Harper, of lands in the thanedom of Aberlemno to Adam Harper, and of lands in Linlithgowshire to Nicholas Harper. David H., in the thirty-fourth year of his reign, confirmed a charter of the lands in Dunse and in Hume, forfeited by the late John Harper, to Alexander de Reclynton. *JoHNSTONE OF Caskieben. Seal of John Johnstone of that Ilk 1595 parted per bend, in chief a buck's head and in base a cross crosslet fitchde, a chief charged with three cushions. Seal of Robert Johnstone, bailie of Aberdeen, 1617, a bend between a boar's (? stag's) head erased in chief and three cross crosslets fitch^e in
—
base.
Porteus gives for Caskiben heads, and as
many
—azure,
a bend between
three
buck's
cross crosslets fitchde argent.
In 1695 the arms of Sir George Johnstoun of Caskieben, baronet, first and fourth, argent, a saltire sable, on a deceased, were recorded chief gules three cushions or; second and third, azure, a bend or between three harts' heads erased argent attired of the second, and as many cross crosslets fitchee of the second, as the coats of Mar and Garioch of Caskieben compounded. His supporters are two Indians wreathed about the middle with laurel. There seems no reason to think that this Aberdeenshire family is a branch of the Annandale Johnstones. In or before 1380 Andrew Garviach, lord of Caskyben, gave a charter of Kinbruyn and Badechash to his son-in-law, Stephen Cherie and Margaret his wife Johnstone, near Aberdeen, being part of the great estate brought to her husband by this lady, a coheir of the Earldom of Mar, her descendants took their surname from it, apparently about 1428. The only mention of the name of Cherie in Scotland I have met with is " " in the Rotuli Scotiae 1342, Thomas Chery and a grant of the forfeiture of the late Adam Chery, in the county of Ayr, by David II., in the thirtyninth year of his reign. It will be observed that the coat compounded of Mar and Garioch sometimes is alone borne, sometimes with the Johnstone chief, and lastly
—
;
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
3 so
the full coat of Johnstone of Annandale is quartered with the composed coat from which the chief is dropped. Johnstone was erected into a barony in 1548, but the lands were sold in 1595. John of that Ilk sat in parliament 1609 his son, George of Caskieben, was created a baronet 1626, with a grant of the barony of Johnstoun in Nova Scotia. Sir George, second baronet, sold Caskieben 1660, and left a son, Sir John, who was hanged at Tyburn 1690, for His cousin and heirtaking part in the abduction of Miss Wharton. male did not assume the title for ten years, till he had repurchased part of the family property, which he had called Caskieben, and had a Crown charter in March 1700, as Sir John Johnstone of Caskieben, baronet. The late Mr Alexander Johnstone, W.S., in his privately printed account of his family, and in his notice of the descendants of James Young, has thrown much light on the history of the Aberdeenshire ;
Johnstones.
An
motto
old crest of the Johnstones of
— " Light theives
Annandale was a
star,
with the
all."
Johnstone of Elphinstone.
First, Seton, said to be
borne as hold-
fourth, Elphinstone. ing of that family second and third Johnstone Several authorities give the arms of this line as argent, a saltire and chief sable, the saltire charged with a rose of the field. Gilbert Johnstone married Agnes Elphinstone, heiress of Elphinstone, in East Lothian, in or before 1472 Samuel of Elphinstone had a grant of the barony of New Elphinstone, in Nova Scotia, and was created a baronet with remainder to his heirs-male whomsoever in 1628, and was dead in 1664. His son, Sir John, died about 1665, leaving a son, Sir James, living 1673, with whom the
—
;
;
:
seems to have failed. There were cadets settled in Edinburgh as merchant burgesses who, to distinguish them from the many persons of their name, were styled " of Elphinstone," so an heir to this title may exist. *KiNTORE. Another coat azure, a chevron between three castles The seal of John de Kenontoir appended to a deed of homage to argent. the king of England in 1292, is oval with awheel ornament. That of de a Kintor is chevron three described between John 1449, charges, by Mr Laing as towers embattled, a chief charged with three mullets crest an eagle devouring its prey. Porteus mentions both the garbs and the castles. In 1296 John and Walter de Kyntowar, both of Peeblesshire, signed direct line
—
—
the
Ragman
;
Roll.
Richard de Kyntor was provost of Aberdeen 1462, and during the fifteenth century the name was that of a family of leading burgesses there; William Kyntor, in 1492, styles himself dominus de Auchgwyok et Ardnabo. Richard de Kintor sat in parliament 1471, and David was sergeant in 1567. Christian and Margaret Kintore, coheirs of lands at Kintore, married into the families of Udny and Chalmers, after the middle of the fifteenth century.
*Kennedy of Kilmuck. Constable of Aberdeen. Keith. The arms of eight branches of this family with *KiRKWOOD. fetter-locks or as
Porteus blazons
many pheons
it
of the
—
differences,
and sable. a chevron between three on gules,
in three instances the chief is paly of six argent first.
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
351
James Kirkwood represented Haddington in parliament 1596, and James of Pilrig sat for Edinburgh in 1633 1610, John, Albany Herald. *Leith of Harthill. Porteus gives or, a cross crosslet fitchde azure between two crescents and a fusil gules. George Leith of Craighall descended of Harthill, registered 1672-78
—
;
—
a cross crosslet fitchde sable between two crescents in chief gules, and three fusils, two and one, in base azure, a bordure indented of the third for difference Elizabeth, daughter of Patrick of Craighall, advocate, in when her cousins. Turner of Turnerhall and Hay of was dead 1787, Cocklaw were her heirs. The arms of Leith cut on a stone at Auchindoir 1580, are described by Mr Jervise "as a cross crosslet" fitchde and a buckle between three Donean Tourist fusils. In the Leith of Harthill is said to have carried supporters, two horse gorged and chained crest a hart, and afterwards a cross crosslet fitchee, with the motto "True to the end ;" the coat is composed with Mar, but the arrangement is confused. " Memorials," described the imprisonment and cruel Spalding, in his treatment of John of Harthill, an ardent royalist, " ane gentleman, chief of ane clan, of good rent." His son. Colonel Patrick, was executed in seems to have been ruined by quarrels and the estate 1647; family lawsuits, of which details are to be found in the Acts of Parliament, and what remained of it w^as sold to Erskine of Pittodrie early in the In the " View of the Diocese of Aberdeen," Harthill eighteenth century. is called chief of his name. The simpler coat given in W. was confirmed in 1688 to John Leith of Montgarie or Whitehaugh— argent, a fess fusild sable, or fusils in fess; crest a dove with an olive branch in its beak motto " Fidus ad Mr Forbes-Leith of Whitehaugh is heir of line of this extremumy branch, of which no account is given in print as yet. Alexander of Montgarie, and Patrick, his eldest son, 1588; William of Montgarie had died before 1599; John, his brother and heir, married Jean Mortimer, and was alive 1619; their son, Patrick of Montgarie, married in 1599, Jean, daughter of Mr Thomas Nicolson, commissary of Aberdeen, and was dead 1641 his son, John of Whitehaugh was dead 1672, leaving John of Whitehaugh, father of Anna and Margaret the elder married or,
;
—
—
;
—
—
;
;
;
William Forbes of Tolquhoun.
The
that recorded, c. 1672, by Robert Leith -of a turtle crest Over or, a chevron between three fusils azure dove proper motto " Semper fidus." " The pedigree of this family in Douglas " Baronage seems, in the earlier generations, altogether wrong George of Overhall possessed part of Kirktown of Premnay, granted by John, commendator of Lindores, to he had a son, John, and a his grandfather, William Leith of Barnes grandson, George, who registered arms and was succeeded before 1672,
coat nearest to this
Barns — ;
is
—
—
;
;
;
Robert of Overhall. Dr Davidson, in his " Inverurie," states that George, last of Overhall, died in 181 7 without issue. Overhall and Over Barnes' are the same. James of Leith Hall registered 1672-78 or, a cross crosslet fitchde sable between three crescents in chief, and as many fusils in base gules crest a cross as in the arms; motto "Trustie to the end;" no sup" Heraldry," or Douglas' porters in the Lyon Register, Nisbet's " Leith was originally of New Leslie, built Baronage." This Mr James
by
his son,
—
—
—
4U
;
'
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
352
mansion-house, which he called Leith Hall, and obtained a Crown charter erecting his various lands into the barony of Leith Hall, which was, in 1705, ratified by parliament in favour of his son and successor, John of Leith Hall. a.
This family, represented by Colonel Leith-Hay of Leith Hall and Rannes, C.B., claims to be heir-male of the Leiths of Barnes. There are three fables in circulation as to the history of the Leiths. First, that they held the barony of Restalrig, in which is situated the port of Leith, and that that property was carried by an heiress to the ancestor of the Logans of Restalrig. Restalrig gave a surname to its early and it till is not the fifteenth owners, century that Leiths are to be found holding some lands there; they were burgesses of Edinburgh, and gave their name to Leith Wynd. Second, that Elizabeth Leith, heiress of married Sir Norman Leslie in the reign of Alexander HL Edingarrock, Last, that William Leith of Barnes married a daughter of Donald, Earl of Mar, and in consequence added a cross crosslet fitchde, the bearing of the house of Mar to his own arms. It is not unlikely that the crosslet indicates that the Leiths held lands of the Earls of
Mar
in
the district of
Garioch.
The founder of the family was William de Lethe, merchant burgess of Aberdeen, which he represented in parliament 1367, who acted for some time as Deputy-Chamberlain was steward of the household to Queen Joan had in 1359 a charter of Rotheneyk, Harebogge, and Blakeboggys; in 1369, a charter of Drumrossy and also possessed Capronstoun, all in Aberdeenshire. William died in 1380, and in 1388 his son Laurence, who was alderman of Aberdeen, had a charter of confirmation of Capronstoun. John de Lethe, also said to have been son of William, had English safe-conducts, 1362-3, as a burgess of Aberdeen, and a Crown charter of Ruthrieston, near Aberdeen. John de Lethe, armiger and scutifer, has in 1406, was a commissioner to repeatedly safe-conducts 1396- 1423 renew the alliance with France; and in 141 2, was sent to the Court of England, along with Sir Walter Stewart of Raylston, by the Duke of Albany, as ambassador. Thomas Lethe of Linlithgow sat in parliament 1366. In 1481-88 Mr Patrick Leith was a lord auditor, and was official of Glasgow. The lands in Aberdeenshire, acquired by William and John in the fourteenth century, long remained in the family, but the published pedigrees are not to be trusted. ;
;
;
;
William
is, in 1469, designed dominus de Barnes. of Barnes possessed Ruthrieston, had a charter of Auchlevin, Henry Ardoyne, and Harelaw in 1490, was dead in 1493, leaving Elizabeth Gordon, widow, and three sons George; William, tutor of his nephew and Patrick. 1509, had a charter in 1493 of half Badycaiss George of Barnes, the eldest, died in September 1506, and was succeeded by his son, John of Barnes, who did not live long, and the next laird was his brother, William of Barnes. William Leith of Edingarrick was great-grandfather of John of
—
;
Edingarrick 1588,
who
left
a daughter and
heir, Isabella, 1613.
Patrick of Lickliehead, 1620-25, was son and heir of Patrick of that place, living 1598-1605, and grandson of William of Lickliehead. The pedigrees inthe" Baronage" donot agree with the above statements.
OF CHARLES US REIGN,
353
—
*Lamb.
Seal of John Lamb, bailie of Edinburgh 1451 the Agnus Dei between two mullets pierced in chief and a mascle in base. Andrew Lamb, Bishop of Brechin in 1612, used a seal with the Paschal Lamb, but in 1619 he had a different coat on a fess between three cinquefoils a dog (?) courant between two mullets crest—a demilion rampant holding a mullet in his dexter paw. Porteus gives for Lambe of Tarrie azure, a lamb passant regardant carrying the Scottish pennoncelle, the saltire thereof gules. He also gives a blazon of the other coat of Lammie, now L'Amy of Dunkenny azure, three fencing swords pendant or a saltorel in base argent Sir James Balfour gives a curious coat for this family parted per fess sable and in chief or, and gules, a fess argent between three figures like the letter a saltire couped in base argent. In a birthbrief issued to Robert Arbuthnott, banker in Paris, the arms of his mother, Margaret, daughter of John Lamy, dean of Brechin, are those here represented, except that there is no glory. Mr John Lammie of Dunkennie registered, 1672-78 azure, three croziers paleways in fess or and a saltire couped in base argent crest a hand proper holding a crozier; motto ''Per varios casusT In 18 1 3 his descendant and heir-general, John Ramsay L'Amy of Dunkenny, was allowed supporters two savages wreathed about the head and middle with laurel, holding clubs over their shoulders proper. In 1296 Nicol Lamb, of the county of Berwick, and Adam Lamb, parson of
—
;
—
—
—
Y
—
—
—
;
—
there, swore fealty to Edward I. and Liolph Nigel Lamby were custumars of Montrose 1372-79. Robert II., by charter in the eleventh year of his reign, granted the office of sergeant to Thomas Lambe. Liulf Lambie, in 1401, witnessed a wadset in favour of Duthac Carnegy in 1410 James Lamby was sheriff-clerk of Forfarshire, and in 1454 Alexander Lamby of Duncane, was on an assize at Forfar. Captain Andrew Lamby was, in 1571, appointed Keeper of the Palace of Linlithgow for life. In 1527 Alexander Lame, in Leith, had a lease for nineteen years of part of the lands of South Tarrie, which afterwards became the property of the family.
Foulesworth
;
Thomas Lamb
sat in parliament for
Kirkcaldy 161 2-21.
LuNDY. Or, three cushions pendant azure. *Leask of that Ilk. Arms registered, 1672-78, by Leask of that "
Ilk,
co.
Aberdeen
;
crest
—a
Mr Alexander
crescent argent
;
motto
—
Virtute crescoT In 1380, Willelmus de Lask pater dominus ej'tisdem, made a grant to the church of Ellon of wax and money, that candles might be burnt on Sundays and feast-days for ever on the place of sepulture of himself and Mascles were his two wives, Alice de Rath and Marion de St Michael. the bearing of the St Michael family. He had a charter of confirmation from David II. of his lands of Leskgaronne. In 1696 Mr Alexander was resident at Leask with his son Gilbert, and his two brothers, but the estate was sold sometime after. LowRiE. There are two representations of the coat argent, a garland vert meeting in a fruit gules in base, within it a cup or with the cover raised and resting on the upper part of the garland. Gules, a pedestal with five feathers (?) issuing from the top, and on them a garland vert with a branch or on either side.
—
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
354
In 1761 these arms were So is Portcus' MS. *LiTTLEjOHN. of Alexander Woodston, and in 1815, as a quarterallowed to Littlejohn William Adam of Blairadam. ing to his heir of entail, the Right Hon. of son of Andrew, Andrew, Edinburgh, was Unicorn Pursuiburgess Herald Ross vant 1636, 1646-63. LovELL OF Balumbie argent, three piles issuing from the chief ;
sable, impaling or, three crosses patee azure. *MoFFAT ; also Moffat of Wachagilie (?) argent, a lion rampant sable this is the bearing on a seal, apparently of the seventeenth century, in the possession of the family of Moffat formerly of Sundaywell. *MossMAN. Porteus gives this, and also azure, a chevron between three oak trees or, which latter coat was allowed in 1786 to Hugh Mos-
—
;
man
of Auchtyfardle, in Lanarkshire, seventh in descent from Allan Mosman, a landowner in the county of Roxburgh in 1532. In the sixteenth century, burgesses, notaries, and goldsmiths of the name are found settled in Edinburgh. In 1532 William Mosman was beheaded for the slaughter of Ralph Weir. James, goldsmith in Edinburgh, possessed Longhermiston, Currie, and Wrae; in 1570 he granted a charter of Wrae in liferent to his wife, Janet, daughter of Alexander King, advocate, and although he was forfeited, his widow had a ratification of her right in 1581. The same year John, burgess of Edinburgh, had the benefit of the pacification, and was served heir to his father, but failed to recover Longhermiston and Currie, which fell to the Crown. Auchtyfardle was purchased by the gentleman who registered arms, he being heir of his father Hugh, writer to the signet, and of his uncle John, merchant in Edinburgh it remains the property of his descendant. ;
MoRiESONE OF LiTTLE AucHREY mullet gules between a garb vert and four ermine spots.
Marjoribanks of Ratho
argent, a fess azure, in chief a a fox's head couped sable, in base ;
argent, on a fess between a mullet in chief and a cushion in base gules three cushions of the first. *Maxtone of Cultoquhey. Sir James Balfour and Porteus give cross crosslets fitchee instead of patee fitchde, and the arms were so registered in 1861, by James Maxtone-Graham of Cultoquhey and Redgorton, CO. Perth. Nisbet describes the seal of Robert Maxton of Cultoquhey 1410 a bend engrailed between three cross crosslets. In 1296 Alexandre de Maxtoun, of the county of Roxburgh, did homage to Edward I. he was Constable of the Castle of Roxburgh in ;
—
;
1285 and 1290. In the reign of William the Lyon, Philip de Maccustun witnessed a charter of Hugh de Normanville to the monks of Melrose, and in the time of Alexander II. John, son of Philip de Mackestun, releases to them certain rights over the lands from which he took his name. Adam de Maxton was Abbot of Newbotle 1259, and of Melrose 1261-67.
Robert de Macestun,
c. 1
monks of Kelso. The name disappears
190, witnessed a charter of
Anselm de Molle
to the
Roxburghshire before the time when the first owner was settled in the county of Perth. Mackenzie of Kintail argent, a stag's head cabossed gules attired or between two mullets in fess azure. in
of Cultoquhey
;
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
355
^
M'Maken. L. gives argent, three dexter hands couped at the wrist paleways gules. Here there is or, a mullet azure between three sinister hands fessways couped at the wrist, and turned to the sinister gules. In 1 84 1 arms were allowed to Alexander Matheson, or MacMathon, of Ardintoul, now of Ardross and Lochalsh, in the county of Ross, founded on this coat ; argent, three dexter hands couped within a bordure gules ; crest a dexter hand holding a scymetar in fess proper motto " Fac et
—
—
;
spera."
The
following year an entirely different coat was assigned to his said to be paternally descended from the same family, James uncle, Matheson of Achany, afterwards Sir James of Lews, baronet gyronny of eight sable and gules, a lion rampant or armed and langued azure ; a bordure of the third charged with three bears' heads, two in chief and one in base ;
couped azure muzzled argent, and two hands fessways in fess holding crest a dexter arm in armour erect holding a daggers erect gules " in fess motto Heart and hand." The bordure is to scymetar proper indicate maternal descent from the family of Mackay. Sir James Balfour gives for Mathesone gyronny of eight sable and g^les, a lion rampant or armed and langued argent, a bordure or charged with crosses fitchee gules he adds a note, " This coate I ratified under my hand and scale to Colonell George Mathesone, 5 Octob. "1639," with crest an armed hand holding a naked sword; motto Hearte in
—
;
;
—
—
;
—
—
hand."
The Mathesons
of Bennetsfield, co. Ross, said to be chief of the and to be clan, represented by Eric Grant Matheson, son of the late Colonel James Brooke Matheson, H.E.I.C.S., apparently bore yet another coat, for which I find no authority argent, two Lx)chaber axes in saltire between a cock in chief and a rose in base. James Matheson was dempster of parliament 1585, and sat in parliament 1592 in 1593 John represented the burgh of Grail in parliament. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries a burgess family in Edinburgh, of good position, held lands in Broughton and Restalrig, and as early as 1477 one of them was a canon of St Giles. The seal of Margaret Matheson appended, in 1601, to a charter of ;
;
lands near Restalrig, is three boars' heads erased. In 1264, Kermac Macmaghan had a grant of twenty cows of fine pf the Earl of Ross. *MoNCUR OF Slaines, really Nevay. This coat, with slight variations, is by several authorities assigned to the above family, but is that of Nevay of that Ilk, co. Forfar. Sir David, a Senator of the College of Justice, registered 1672-78 sable, a chevalier armed cap-a-pie brandishing a scymetar aloft, mounted on horseback argent within a bordure gules (? of the second). Pont gives for Neaffe, baron of Methie azure, a man armed of on a horse argent advancing his sword, a sinister hand of the third in the sinister also Nevay of that Ilk, as Sir David, man and horse, &c., proper and without the bordure. The surname is taken from Nevay; in 1 219 Adam de Neveth was present at a perambulation of the boundary between the lands of the Abbey of Arbroath aud the barony of Kinblethmont in 1422 Alexander de Neve, then a prisoner in England, in the hands of Galfrid Lowther,
—
—
;
;
4X
GENTLEMEN S ARMS
356
had a safe-conduct to visit Scotland with the object of raising ransom money. David of that Ilk died in 1664, leaving five children in minority, to whom their granduncle, Sir David of Reidie, a Senator of the College of Justice, was tutor. John of that Ilk, the eldest son, was father of David of that Ilk, who his sister Elizabeth, wife of Sir James Kinloch d.s.p. before 17 14, when who took the additional name of Nevay, was heir of of Kinloch, Baronet, line, and his cousin Alexander, farmer in Dunnichen, was heir-male. Although the elder line had retained the designation of that Ilk and part of the estate of Nevay, the barony of Nevay was held by the judge and David Nevay of Reidie, advocate, younger son of John his descendants. of that Ilk, who died in May 161 4, was raised to the bench and knighted on the Restoration, being at first styled Lord Reidie, but after he had got possession of Nevay, he took his title from that property he married, 1653, Margaret, daughter of Sir Patrick Hay of Pitfour, and died in 1683, Elizaleaving a son David of Nevay, who d.s.p. and three daughters married Crawmarried Sir of Murie Isabella, beth, John Hay Henry furd of Monorgan, and had issue and Margaret married Thomas Miln ;
—
;
;
of Milnfield,
s.p.
" Ochterlony in his Account of Forfarshire," calls Nevay of that Ilk " an ancient gentleman chief of his name," and says of Sir David, that he *' also assumes the title of Nevay." Sir George Mackenzie also gives Nevay of that Ilk with the plain " coat, and to Neavy now designed of Neavy, one of the Senators of the the arms within a bordure gules. College of Justice," " The " baron of Methie, above mentioned, was James Nevay, who went to Sweden in 1579, with certificates of gentle birth and high characHe rose to be governor of Westmanland and Dalarne, was killed by ter. the peasantry, and on the monument erected to his memory by his son-inlaw, Johan Skytte, the eight quarters are Nevay, Gray, Leslie, Lindsay of Crawford, Wishart of Pittarrow, Lindsay of the Byres, Ogilvy, and Ramsay of Auchterhouse. Maculloch of Merton argent, three wolves' heads erased azure. The usual coat of the name is ermine, a fret gules or ermine, fretty Porteus gives for Merton ermine, a fret gules and for Cargules. doness the same, with a moyen, azure, three boars' or wolves' heads The heads in G. certainly rather resemble those of the erased argent. wolf than of the boar. This double coat was allowed in 181 4 to John M'Culloch of Barholm, the fret being engrailed, and the escutcheon azure, threewolves' heads erased argent supporters, as heir-male of the families of Muile, Myretown, and Cardoness two men in armour, each holding a spear in his hand proper. Sir Godfrey of The engrailing of the fret is not very intelligible. ;
—
;
;
;
—
—
Myrtoune, baronet, registered 1672-78 ermine, fretty gules, and James of Muile the same, within a bordure indented of the second. The fret engrailed was registered about the same time by Sir Hugh of Pilton, near Edinburgh, descended from the Macullochs of Cadboll in Ross-shire ^^ crest an ermine proper; motto Sine macuid;" this coat impaled with the bearing of his wife, Jean Gibson, three keys fessways in pale with a mullet for difference, is cut on his monument in the churchyard of the Greyfriars, Edinburgh, with the date 1688 he had no issue, and his widow married Lord Lindores.
—
—
;
;
OF CHARLES The
F.S
REIGN.
357
Alexander Macculach, 1431, has ermine fretty; he was on an assize as to the tenure of Kilravock and Geddes. In 1477 John M'Culloch had a charter of the lands of CadboU from William, Bishop of Moray. In the seventeenth century the burgh of Tain was frequently represented in parliament by Thomas, James, and Andrew Maculloch. In Galloway the family was of importance from an early period in 1296 the Ragman Roll was signed by Thomas Maculagh, William MacUlagh, and Michel MacUlagh, all of the county of Wigton. In 1305 Thomas Mackhulagh was sheriff of Wigton; in 1363 Sir Patrick M'Owlache had restoration of his lands Sir Alexander M'Culloch was seal of
;
;
sheriff of
Wigton
c.
1490.
Although the antiquity and rank of this family are beyond doubt, no satisfactory pedigree exists Myrtoun was the property of Sir Thomas at the end of the fourteenth century Sir Alexander was Master Falconer to James IV., and in 1504 had a charter erecting Myrtoun into a burgh of barony. Sir Alexander of Myrtoun was created a baronet loth August his 1664, but the patent is not recorded, and the limitation is unknown Sir wasted his and had a with William son, estate, Godfrey, dispute Gordon, one of his creditors, whom he shot and mortally wounded in in his dying speech he 1696, for which he was executed at Edinburgh mentions his " wife and poor children." The chief remaining family of the name is seated at Ardwall, which has been in their possession since 1488 at any rate. MiDDLETON OF KiLHiLL. Shortly before the general registration of arms in Scotland began in 1672, John, Earl of Middleton, had been at the head of affairs as Lord High Commissioner to Parliament, Commander-in-Chief, Governor of Edinburgh Castle, and an Extraordinary Lord of Session. His brother-in-law. Sir Alexander Durham, had been Lord Lyon, and these circumstances, no doubt, led to the matriculation of arms by no less than six persons of this family, and four more entered arms between 1731 and 1768, two of the earlier entries being by cadets of ;
;
;
;
Kilhill.
The Earl was allowed
to
his
augment
arms by the addition of the
double tressure, borne like the lion counterchanged. It may seem presumptuous, in the face of such authority, to ask " were these the proper arms of Middleton ?" but the facts are as follows. No authority is known to me for any coat for the name in Scotland earlier than Sir James Balfour, who gives four all differing from one another, and except the
resembling the registered bearings. First, vert, a lion salient regardant or second, gules, a cross engrailed argent third, ermine, on a canton or an escutcheon gules fourth, azure, three cinquefoils within a bordure argent. Pont, a contemporary of Sir James, assigns to Middleton of KilThe next authority is hill and Middleton of Greiston, the arms as in G. the at Herald Snowdon Restoration, the very time Porteus, appointed when Middleton's rise to power occurred he gives, of course, the Earl's arms with the tressure among the peers, but in his alphabetical list of the gentry there is only " Midilton of Greston partie per fess or and g. a first,
not at
all
;
;
;
;
lyon rampant interchanged." Now there never was, that I can discover, a family of Middleton possessed of Greiston, or of any estate whose name resembles that there was in Peeblesshire, in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, an old family ;
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
358
of Middlemast of Greiston, a younger branch of which possessed Chapel, of whose arms we have no record, if these Middleton of Greiston entries do not refer to them. In 1876, Miss Biscoe, who is descended from the family, published " The Earls of Middleton," with genealogical details, and Mr James Mid" dleton Paton has printed for private circulation Memoranda," and a genealogical sketch of the branch from which he descends. The surname is taken from lands in Kincardineshire, which were alienated in 1540; Humphrey de Middleton witnessed two charters in the Humphrey de Midleton, of that county, did reign of Alexander II. to Edward I. 1296. homage Robert, Abbot of Arbroath 1261-67, gave a certificate of the death, in she is his monastery, of Constance de Middleton and her son Adam called daughter of the late Robert Tybald and Mary his wife. Gilbert Middleton of that Ilk was sheriff of Angus 1516. The first earl had several brothers ; Alexander, Principal of King's College, Aberdeen, is represented, if no descendants in the male line exist of Major-General Patrick Middleton of the Polish service, who had two sons alive in 1779, by Charles John Middleton, Principal Registrar of H.M. Court of Probate James was in the army of the King of Spain in the Netherlands, and in 1731 his great-grandson, James Francis Edward Middleton, obtained from the Lyon Office a certificate of his pedigree and arms, with a thistle in the paw of the lion ; Andrew of Pitgarvie and Balbegno, whose descendants in the male line are extinct ; Lieutenant-Colonel William, who is believed to have been father of John Middleton, burgess of Aberdeen, who bought Shiels, in that county, in ;
;
;
represented by John Middleton, merchant in Glasgow, who arms in 1864 there were at least two other brothers of the earl. registered Charles Lord Barham was a descendant of the Principal, and the peerage conferred on him in 1805 is vested in his great-grandson the Earl of Gainsborough he was allowed the tressure. C. These arms were registered 1672-78 by Mr John Methven, Methven of Craigton, co. Fife, with crest a cross patde or within a cres1735,
and
is
;
;
cent argent
;
motto—
—
"
Marie
et clypeo."
In 1725 Sir Paul Methven, K.B., Treasurer of H.M. Household, was allowed a different coat argent, three wolves' heads erased proper no crest or motto. He is stated to descend from Paul Methven, a zealous of the Reformation, who settled in England in the reign of promoter Queen Elizabeth. The cause of his leaving Scotland is mentioned in a he letter, 22nd January 1563, of Thomas Randolph to Sir William Cecil had been convicted of adultery with his servant, excommunicated, and failing to perform public penance, as ordained by the General Assembly,
—
— ;
England in the autumn of 1566. Methven was a native of Dunand had been a baker there. dee, Sir Paul's cousin and heir was ancestor of Lord Methuen, who now " on the breast of an imperial eagle." This assumption places his shield had not taken place when Douglas' " Baronage," which contains an account of the family, appeared perhaps it followed on the discovery of a seal of John de Methvyn, appended to an indenture of truce between England and Scotland, signed in 1451, now in the Record Office; Mr Laing describes the bearings as three eagles' heads on a shield in front of an eagle. fled to
;
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
359
There are other instances of
this arrangement, which has no imperial said to have been " granted as a mark of honour to significance, although the family by Albert I., Emperor of Germany, 1304." In the '* Herald and Genealogist," vol. vii., there is a critical examination of the Methven
hand and another article has lately appeared by an experienced pedigree " " in the Genealogist on the same subject, contributed by the writer. Together they give an account of the old family of Methven of Methven, in Perthshire, of various persons bearing the name, and show the inaccuracy of the modern statements. Sir James Balfour's blazon is or, three peacocks' heads erased Porteus makes it proper while argent, three wolfs' heads erased sable, the shield of John, in 1451, being on the breast of a two-headed eagle ;
—
;
—
gules.
Mr
and
John Methven was
I feel
official of Lothian and vicar of Edinburgh, inclined to think that one of the armorial shields in the Cathe-
dral of St Giles, Edinburgh, is his. It has been supposed to be Nicolson, Mr David Laing, in his " Historical Notices of St three hawks' heads. Giles," prefixed to the chartulary, says this is an error, and indeed there
were no Nicolsons of note connected with Edinburgh, or bearing arms, in the middle of the fifteenth century. The heads are erased, and might be those of an animal, and he gives them for Otterburn Mr John Otterburn bore three otters' heads couped, while the Methven heads, be they ;
eagles' or wolfs', are always erased. Melville. Several coats of different branches with marks of cadency. *Maine. This coat is cut in stone at Kirkwall, with the date 1592, the bend being a sinister one. Arms were registered, in 1673, by Robert Maine of Loch wood, co. Lanark in 1730 by Edward Mayne of
Mr
;
and c. 1700, by George Main, jeweller in in the bend is changed to a chevron voided gules in a all Edinburgh field argent, but the pheon, unicorn's head, and fleur-de-lis are retained as Powis, merchant in Lisbon
;
;
charges.
Robert of Lochwood married Margaret Cleland of the Gartness family, and was dead in 1692, leaving three daughters. Edward of Powis and Logic died unm., and the estate remained in possession of the descendants of his brother for three generations one of his nephews was William, Viscount Newhaven. The jeweller's only son was dead, without issue, in 1744, so that there is no one of the name now in Scotland with a legal right to arms. ;
* Marshall.
Another coat is given— gules, two rolls of paper in and base. The one represented somewhat resembles that given in W. for Mitchell, and borne but not registered by the Mitchelsons of Middleton in Mid-Lothian. MACLEOD OF THAT Ilk. Quarterly first, azure, a castle with three towers argent second, or, a lion rampant gules third, or, lymphad sails fourth azure. furled and oars in saltire sable NoRVELL OF Gargunnock. Argent, four bendlets gules and three
*MiTCHELSONE.
saltire argent, three plates in flank
—
;
;
;
martlets azure in bend.
Azure, three boars' heads erased argent. An added coat of later date in Porteus' MS.,
Newtoune. * Noble.
three olive or bay leaves vert.
4Y
is—argent,
36o
.
Arms
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS by the representative of the farriily of Noble of Dumbarton, John Noble, C.B., Lieutenant-
registered, 1827,
Ardmore and Ardardan,
co.
Colonel of Horse Artillery H.E.I.C.S.
—gules, a chevron ermine between
three bay leaves slipped or. In 1296 Thomas and Patrick le Noble, of the county of Edinburgh, did homage to Edward I. in 1314 a safe-conduct to Mr John Lindsay, includes among his retinue Patrick le Noble. John Noble was provost David was custumar of that burgh and custumar of Linlithgow 1329; ;
and Godfrey was bailie in 1365. Henry de Bohun, Earl of Hereford, before a.d 1200, granted parts of Kinpont, Illeston, and Ratho to William Noble his son Sir Ralph, and Thomas and Ralph sons of Sir Ralph, alienated Kinpont and IllesIn 1294 King John granted to ton to David de Graham 1245-55, Patrick Noble on the resignation of his father Thomas, probably the two persons whose names are on the Ragman Roll, a charter of confirmation of Westhall of Ratho. There is an account, in Irving's " Dumbartonshire," of the family of Noble. It is said that Walter had a charter of Ferme in 1467, and that it was sold by James in 1537, who then acquired Ardardan. Both the Robert Noble possessed Ardardan (u. latter statements are erroneous. 1500, and Nobles of Ferme, or of Noble-Ferme, occur frequently in the Criminal Trials, Acts of Parliament, Retours, &c., down to 1783, being also possessed of Ardardan. The seal of Robert Noble, bailie of Dumbarton, 1490, is stated to bear three holly or burdock leaves. The estates were sold, in 1798, by 1340
;
;
William, father of Colonel Noble, who registered arms. The family is represented by Captain Andrew Noble, Royal Artillery. younger branch possessed Kipperminshock for several genera-
A
tions.
William of Dalnottar sat in parliament for Dumbartonshire 1681. Margaret Noble, Lady Cathcart, is not mentioned in the pedigree. She was, in 1580, widow of William Sempill of Cathcart, and died in Her grandson, Robert Livingstone, was served heir to her April 1608. in 1615.
Neilsone.
Argent, a dexter hand couped at the wrist fessways, holding a knife in pale point downwards, in sinister base a man's heart
—
Another coat argent, three sinister hands couped at the wrist proper. two and one bend sinisterways. gules, *NicoLSONE. Seal of William Necolsoun of Park, 1527 a saltire
—
couped. Porteus gives the coat here represented, but with the tinctures reversed, and Font's blazon is or, a lion's head erased between three eagles' heads within a bordure gules. Arms registered, in February 1676, by Sir John of that Ilk, baronet or, three falcons' heads erased gules armed argent ; crest a lion issuant or armed and langued gules motto " Generositate ;'' supporters two eagles or armed gules. These arms, including the supporters, were allowed, in March 1826, to Arthur Nicolson of Lochend, in Shetland, Esquire, who had, in the preceding August, been served heir-male of Sir James Nicolson of Nicolson and Lasswade, baronet of Nova Scotia, which title he afterwards assumed. The patent, of date, 1629, is in favour of Mr John Nicolson of Lasswade and his heirs-male, and contains a grant of the barony of Lasswade in Nova Scotia.
—
—
— —
;
—
OF CHARLES Mr
F.S
REIGN,
361
—
George Nicolson of Clunie registered arms 1672-78 or, three heads erased gules crest a lion's head erased or motto^-" Nil eagles' " this gentleman was afterwards a Senator of the sistere contra ; College of Justice, and as there is no satisfactory account of his family one may be here attempted. George, burgess of Aberdeen, sat in parliament for the Howison. His son, Thomas of Pitmedden, city 1617, married bailie and burgess of Aberdeen, married an Abercromby, said to be of the Pitmedden family, and had, with a younger son, Thomas, the first Vicar Apostolic appointed in Scotland, 1694, and Bishop of Peristachium, died 1718, aged seventy-six; a son and heir. Sir George, Lord Kemnay, 1682, first designed of Clunie, then, 1682-88, of Kemnay, latterly of Balcaskie in Fife, married Margaret Halliburton, and died 171 1. His eldest son, Thomas, had been created a baronet 15th April 1700,' married Margaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Nicolson of Carnock, and died in 1728, leaving three daughters. Isabella married Thomas, younger son of John Brisbane of that Ilk Margaret married William, Marquess of Lothian and Eleanor married first, Hon. Thomas Boyd secondly John Crawfurd of Crawfurdland. William Nicolson of Mergy, brother of Sir Thomas, succeeded him in some property in Berwickshire, and assumed the title bought Glenmarried four times, his last wife being Agnes, daughter bervie, 1721 and co-heir of Robert Burnett of Muchalls, widow of Thomas Burnett of
—
;
;
—
;
;
;
,-
;
;
Glenbervie, died in 1766, in his ninety-third year. Sir James, his son, married first. Miss Smith, niece of Sir Thomas Burnett, Bart. secondly, in 1779, a daughter of Major Wharton, and died without issue 1782, when the title was assumed by his cousin Sir James, captain in the service of the King of Portugal, and Glenbervie
—
;
passed to his eldest Ivie of
Mount
sister,
Helen;
Alto, in Ireland
of Mill of Fearn at Dundee, all of
;
;
who
married
—
secondly, in 1793,
first,
in
George
1791, Henry Mill, brother
James Mitchell, Collector of Customs assumed the surname of Nicolson, but had no
third, in 1813,
whom
issue.
Her
John or Joan, married, 1797, Rev. James Wilson, minister of Farnell, and had (with another daughter, who married David Smith) Ann, who sue. to Glenbervie, married Dr Badenach of Arthurhouse, died 1878, and was sue. by her son James Badenach-Nicolson q{ sister,
Glenbervie, advocate. To return to the family designed of that Ilk; they seem apparently much connected with Brechin ; Mr James, Parson of Farnell was appointed Dean of Brechin in November 1577, and died before November 1581. In 1577 Mr Paul Fraser, chantor of Brechin, made a gift to his cousin James Nicolson, writer, burgess of Edinburgh, of a life annuity of ;;^63, 6s. 8d., charged on lands in Forfarshire. The same year, Mr John, son of James, had a gift from the king of certain sums payable from the revenue of the bishopric of Brechin for five years, to enable him to study on the Continent. In 1580 Thomas, also son of James, had a grant from the Crown, payable from the same source, towards the expense of his education this Thomas was afterwards Commissary of Aberdeen, and His sons. Sir James, in 162 1, acquired Cockburnspath, co. Berwick. of Cockburnspath, and Sir Thomas, King's Advocate and Privy Councillor 1649, both died without male issue to survive. :
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
o 62
Mr
John, above named, was a successful advocate, acquired Lassand other lands married Elizabeth, daughter of Edward of the College of Justice, and Commissary of EdinSenator Henrysoun, burgh. Their son was Sir John, first baronet of Lasswade, grandfather of Sir John, who had the barony of Clerkington erected into the barony of Nicolson by charter in 1669, containing many privileges. The direct line ended on the death of Sir James in May 1743, when the title became dormant, till assumed by Arthur of Lochend. He claimed to descend from James, Bishop of Dunkeld, 1607, a son of James, the Edinburgh male heir exists, but there seems to be some doubt as to the writer. as the case, family are not to be found in all the peerages, &c. Another claim was made by an alleged descendant of George Nicolson, said to be brother of the first baronet. There is a third baronetcy, conferred in 1637 on Thomas Nicolson of Carnock, advocate, who must, according to Funeral Escutcheons, have been a younger brother of the first baronet of Lasswade (?). The Carnock estate, on the death, in 1686, of Sir Thomas Nicolson, Lord Napier, passed to his aunts; was entailed in 171 1 by Eleanor Nicolson, Lady Shaw of Greenock and in 1792 her descendant and heir of entail, Michael Stewart Nicolson of Carnock, registered arms or, three falcons' heads erased gules beaked sable within a bordure azure, quartering Stewart crest, a: '' Nil sistere contra.''' In 1807 he again lion's head erased gules motto, recorded arms, dropping the surname and coat of Stewart, and was allowed supporters, two eagles regardant proper with wings expanded. Carnock remains with this family, and the baronetcy with the heir-male. *OuDNY OF THAT Ilk. The writer contributed to the " Genealogist," in 1877, an account of the old Aberdeenshire family of Udny. Patrick Udny of that Ilk, c. 1350, is the first that has been traced. Udny is styled a lordship in the sixteenth century, and was erected into a barony. There has been much variation in the bearings gules, two hounds climbing to a hart mounted on a tree proper gules, three fleursde-lis or, and two greyhounds leaping at a hart's head argent gules, a fleur-de-lis held up by two greyhounds sejant argent argent, a tree proper growing out of the base between two greyhounds counter salient azure. Alexander Udny of that Ilk, obtained a warrant from Sir Charles Erskine, Lyon, dated 21st June 1665, for the following gules, a stag's head couped and cabossed or, in honour point two greyhounds argent countersalient of the first and second, with three fleurs-de-lis, two in chief and one in base crest a fleur-de-lis gules supporters, as representer of a family of Free Barons holding directly of the Crown two naked savages wreathed about the head and middle with green branches resting their interior hands on the shield, and supporting in the other hand a This confused blazon was modified, when Alexgigantic baton proper. ander registered arms 1672-78, to gules, two greyhounds countersalient argent collared of the field, in the honour point a stag's head couped, attired with ten tynes all between three fleurs-de-lis or motto " All my
wade
in 1607,
;
A
—
;
;
;
—
;
;
;
—
;
—
—
;
—
God
"
;
—
no supporters. His brothers, Robert of Auchterellon, John of Cultercallen, and Arthur, merchant burgess of Edinburgh, entered arms at the same time hope
is in
;
with differences. Peter Udny, a cadet, entered the military service of Sweden, and was recognised as noble in 1647.
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
363
Another registration was made in 1789 by Robert Udny, otherwise Robert Fullarton-Udny of Udny and Dudwick ^gules, a stag's head cabossed or between two greyhounds salient affrontee argent collared of the field between three fleurs-de-lis two and one of the second. The supporters are described as wreathed with oak-leaves, and with batons resting on their shoulders. *OswALD. This is the only authority found for what seems to be It was altered to a naked man or the older coat of the name. savage or comet in a star dexter chief, which is evidently founded on pointing to the hand pointing up towards two stars. In 1670 arms were allowed to Mr Andrew Oswald of Dalderse, clerk of Exchequer azure, a savage proper wreathed with bay leaves, holding in his sinister hand a baton erect on his shoulder vert, and pointing with the other hand to a comet in dexter chief or crest a comet motto " Monstrant astra viam." A few years later James Oswald, skipper in Kirkcaldy, had a grant, the only difference in the arms being that the savage points to the star with a cross staff held in his dexter hand. James Oswald of Fingaltoun, co. Renfrew, soon after entered similar arms, the savage holding a bow in his sinister hand, and having a sheaf of arrows by his side. This gentleman, who was receiver-general of taxes, was afterwards knighted an account of his family was contributed by me " Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica." to the The skipper in Kirkcaldy belonged to an old burgess family there, represented the burgh in parliament 1703-7, and acquired Dunnikier, which remains the seat of his representative to this family belonged the Right Hon. James Oswald of Dunnikier John, Bishop of Raphoe, who died in 1780 and General Sir John of Dunnikier, G.C.B. Mr Andrew, son of Alexander Oswald, portioner of Falkirk, acquired Dalderse before the Restoration it was erected into a barony by Crown charter in his favour, 1666, and remained with his descendants for three
—
—
—
;
—
•
;
;
;
;
;
;
generations.
Arms were
in
granted in 1764 to Richard Oswald of Scotstoun, and his to cousin, Richard of Auchencruive, both merchants, sons of 1770
parish ministers in the county of Caithness. *Orchardtoune of that Ilk. No such family ever existed, and Litera the prosapice under the Great Seal, issued in 1663 in favour of John Orchardton, Major of the Guards of the King of Sweden, is one of the best examples of a genealogical fable sanctioned by the highest authority, of which there were many in the seventeenth century. Mr Marryat, who, by the way, describes the gentleman as major of a regiment of foot, says that the Swedes at last became so suspicious of the universality of high birth among the Scottish soldiers of fortune who joined their army, that in some cases, as that of Lieutenant7Colonel Patrick Ogilvy of the family of Balgay, they insisted not on a mere certificate, but exacted a formal genealogy on parchment, with the arms of his ancestors painted at the top and his own portrait at the foot (? to prevent a member of the Ridderhus. Major personation), before receiving him of Orchardton attained the rank Colonel, and died in 1679. The birthbrief gives him sixteen quarters, including Allardyce, Strachan, Ramsay, Rait, &c., on the father's side his mother, Elizabeth Robertson, is traced back through a line of hereditary owners of part of ;
4z
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
364
was no such barony), directly Robertsonortim Struance barommt familia. descended from Clarissima Her quarters were Pringle, Ramsay, Gibb, Mure, &c. Here at least there was a slight foundation of fact; in 1601 Mr James Robertson was served heir of his father Patrick, burgess of Edinburgh, in a part of Jerresland of Auchtermuchty. The inquirer into the pedigree of Orchardton will look in vain the barony of Easter Auchtermuchty (there
through the Spalding Club volumes for notices of the family of that Ilk in the shire of Aberdeen, and its honourable alliances but in the parish of Udny there is a place called Orchardtown, which, in 1625, was the property of Seton of Schethen, having previously belonged to Tullidaff of ;
that Ilk.
Paxton.
Argent, two chevronels sable and three mullets gules in pale another coat azure, on a chevron argent five garbs of the field. Sir James Balfour gives— argent, two chevrons sable and three mullets ;
—
in chief gules.
Porteus says two mullets in chief, and gives both the coats in G., making the garbs in the second one sable. An early seal of David de Paxton bears an eagle displayed that of William de Paxton, a.d. 1250, is a pelican in her piety in a nest John de Paxton, in 1430, uses a cross between four charges like ermine spots, and the following year he or a namesake seals with a lion rampant. The name is taken from Paxton, a territorimn in Berwickshire, where ;
;
the family long
owned
land.
Mr
Robert de Paxton occurs as a witness in cartulary of Kelso, c. and 1250, may be the Mr Robert who was Prior of St John of Jerusalem in Scotland, and Sheriff of Berwick 1296. In that year Nicol and Robert de Paxton of Berwickshire did homage to Edward I., while the lands of Abberwyke, in Northumberland, were taken possession of by the king, their owner, William de Paxton, being then in Scotland. In 1334 the lands of Aldincraw in Paxton, formerly belonging to William de Paxton, were restored to Lucy, wife of Roger de Paxton. Adam de Paxton held one-third of Paxton in the reign of Alexander he left a widow, III., had a charter of mill of Edrington from Robert I. who married de and a son in Rok, Mary, Ralph minority in 1337 his forfeiture was granted by Robert II. to John de Roos and John Lyoun, but the Paxtons seem to have retained some of their lands. 1397 Alexander, 1428 Nicol and John, 1455 Patrick de Paxton in 1494 John was charged with being accessory to the slaughter of Thomas Hogert in Stitchill William died before 1597, possessed of Auchincraw, formerly Auldincraw, and parts of Paxton, in which his son Nicol Paxton was served heir to him. These lands were soon afterwards in the hands of a branch of the Nisbets. Porteus of Hawkshaw. Azure, three stags* heads cabossed or. ;
;
;
;
They should be couped.
—^ — 1674-78, by George, Marchmont Herald azure, a —a bucks' heads erased or dove with
Seal of William Pertus of the county of Peebles engrailed between four roses.
Arms
registered,
1439
saltire
between three crest turtle an olive branch in her beak proper motto " I wait my tyme." He was also herald painter and an industrious collector his commission as thistle
—
;
;
;
Herald, 31st March 1674, designs
him
painter burgess of Edinburgh,
OF CHARLES
REIGN.
L'S
365
and he may have been a son of Robert, merchant burgess of Edinburgh, who was appointed Snowdon Herald 12th January 1661, compiled a valuable heraldic MS., frequently quoted in this work, and died in 1664, leaving a widow, whose name was Alan, and a son and heir, James. George acquired the estate of Craiglockhart, near Edinburgh, and died in 1698, leaving three sons William of Craiglockhart, d.s.p. 1718;
—
Robert of Craiglockhart, d.s.p. in or before 1739; Andrew of Burnfoot, writer in Edinburgh, heir of his elder brother. Porteus of Hawkshaw, was an old family in Peeblesshire, and their arms, given by the Snowdon Herald, are azure, three harts' heads erased argent, to which is added, " attired with ten tynes and or, herald In 1732, Michael 1662," being probably the coat as he bore it himself. Anderson of Tushilaw, was allowed to quarter in right of his mother, Henrietta Porteus, heiress of Hawkshaw azure, three bucks' heads attired or. Hawkshaw had been in the possession of the couped argent from about the middle of the fifteenth century. A branch seated family at Glenkirk ended in John Porteus of Glenkirk, to whom his grand-
—
—
nephew, John Aitken, was served heir-special in 1797. *Payet of Auchinheapeir. Blazoned by Porteous argent, a pay^ yot (magpie) sitting on a tree proper. In 1707 William Pyet, a trader, presented a petition to Parliament praying that he and his kinsmen and relations might be permitted to discharge the ignominious nick-name of Pyet, and assume and use their ancient surname of Graham, which was that of their ancestors and after some unhappy difference between clans had been dropped, they being forced to leave their native residence, and obliged to cover themselves under the surname of Pyet. This desire was granted. Bryce Pyot was custumar of Inverness 1361 the name occurs in the cartularies of Brechin, Arbroath, and Aberdeen in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and persons of the name were owners of land at Balmyle in the seventeenth. Mr Laurence was archdeacon of Aberdeen 1440-65 Patrick and Thomas were Masters of the House of St Germains of the order of St John of Jerusalem a little later 1466, Henry of Pyotstoun, CO. Fife. Another rather wholesale change of the name took place under the following circumstances: William Maitland, F.R.S., author of the " " History of London," History of Edinburgh," and other works, died in 1757? leaving a fortune to his sister and heir, Lilias, widow of Robert Ramsay, merchant and bailie of Montrose her daughter, Katherine Ramsay, wife of James Pyott junior, merchant and bailie of Montrose, left a family of six sons and five daughters, who all, in 1772, as heirs to the Maitland property, assumed that surname. *Rainie. Arms granted 1760 to Alexander Renny, merchant in Montrose argent, a tree growing out of the base vert, on a chief gules two wings conjoined ermine. A previous grant had been made in- 1731 to Mrs Mary Raining, eldest daughter of Thomas, merchant in Norwich, on a chief argent, an oak tree growing out of a mount in base proper,
—
;
:
;
;
—
;
—
—
azure three mullets of the first. Herbert Rainie or Rayning sat in Parliament for Dumfries 1572 was provost of the burgh then and several times afterwards till 1592 Robert In 1623 Agnes, heiress of this family, Rayning was provost in 1578. of John daughter of Thomas, merchant burgess of Dumfries, was wife ;
;
Williamson, merchant burgess there.
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
366
Symon Renny was
The Ranys
bailie of Inverkeithing in 1362. or Rennys were owners of land in Forfarshire
from the were granted, was of the family of Renny of Usan. Elizabeth, daughter and heir of Robert of Usan, advocate, married Archibald Scott, younger of Duninald. Elizabeth Jean Tailyour, heiress of and died in 1761, leaving issue. of the Usan cadet married a Barrowfield, family, and her grandson is the present Colonel Thomas Renny-Tailyour of Barrowfield. Thomas, merchant in Montrose, also a cadet of Usan, married Jean Strachan, heiress of Tarrie, and their son, Thomas Renny-Strachan of Tarrie and Seaton, W.S., died in 1823, having executed an entail under which the estates passed to John Renny-Strachan Carnegie, who is not descended from the Rennys. Rattray of that Ilk. Azure, a fess argent, in dexter chief a star of five points pierced, in sinister chief and in base a cross crosslet fitchde all middle of the
fifteenth century.
Alexander, to
whom arms
of the second.
Reidheugh. Azure, three pelicans vulning themselves or. Sir which has also the the Balfour of same, Porteus, gives James authority but the arms recorded in 1678, by John Reidheugh of Cultibragan, co. Perth, representative of James of Cultibragan, comptroller to James IV., are, or, in a nest vert and pelican vulned and feeding her young proper; two turtle doves respecting each other azure motto crest Nil nequit amor." The seal of James of Cultibragan in 1599 has one pelican. The family possessed besides the estate near Comrie, from which they took their designation, the barony of Tullychettel, and cadets owned
—
;
—
''
Meyour, Aberlednoch, Tomparran, &c. Hugh de Redhuche, 1388; 1462, Andrew Reidheuch of Quarrel, co. 1495, Stirling; 1485, Richard was elected for the burghs on the articles Agnes, widow of David Bruce of Kennett James of Tullychettel, 1509; Edward of Cultibragan married, about 1560, Christian, daughter and co-heir of Sir John Campbell of Glenorchy. Cultibragan remained the seat of the family till after the middle of the eighteenth century. his eldest Henry possessed Wester Aberlednoch and Tomparran a left in had a suit with her uncle, son, Peter, 1561, daughter, Isobel, who, as to the succession. William, William of Aberlednoch married Sibilla, daughter of John Drummond of Colqualzie his eldest son, Henry, left a daughter and heir, his Janet, married, before 1657, James, brother of Oliphant of Cask second son, David of Aberlednoch, was father of Mr Alexander and James, West India merchants, who, in October 1644, were taken at sea and carried to Algiers, where they were kept in prison. Alexander was ransomed, negotiated for the freedom of his fellow captives, and had the misfortune to lose his wife and children by the plague 1647. In the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, of which, in 1618, George Redick was sheriff-depute, there were Reriks, Riddicks, Rediks, or Redocks of The name which appears in Barnhowrie, Dalbeattie, Corbietoun, &c. ;
;
;
;
;
the fifteenth century is still represented. Mr M'Kerlie, in " Lands and their Owners in Galloway," gives the arms of John Redik of Dalbeattie, from a stone with the date 1600 a sinister hand couped between three billets, one and two. •Reid of Pitfoddels. Sir James Balfour gives this coat, but with three mullets gules in the first and fourth quarters.
—
OF CHARLES
F.S
REIGN.
367
Mr
Robert of Birnes registered arms, 1672-78, as a descendant, withThe arms, are on the monument at Aberdeen, of Marion out difference. of Reid, Lady Pitfoddels, and Thomas Menzies her husband. In 1335, Patrick dictus Rede, was on an assize at Rayne in 1389 William Rede had Wester Pitfoddels in wadset from his cousin Alexander de Moravia of Culbyne his grandson, Andrew of Pitfoddels, was father of Alexander of that place, who married first, Marion Cullen second, and left an as above. Crawford, heiress, Marion, Margaret Robert, who, in 1488, was brother and heir apparent of Alexander, was probably grandfather of Mr James, minister of Banchory-Ternan his sons were Thomas, Greek and Latin 1567, who died about 1601 ;
—
;
;
;
who
Alexander, physician to" Charles L Buchanan's Mr Adam, History of Scotland minister of Methlick and the eldest was Mr Robert, minister of Banchory-Ternan, grandfather of Mr Robert of Birnes and Balnakettle, also minister of Banchory-Ternan, whose eldest son was Mr Robert of His second son, Mr Thomas, had a Balnakettle, co. Kincardine. Mr minister of son, Lewis, Strachan, father of Dr Thomas, the metaphysician, who died in 1796. The Reids of Colliston, also in Aberdeenshire, whose arms are given in F., are paternally Ramsays, and bear the eagle displayed with an escutcheon gules, sometimes or, on his breast. In 1408 Archibald, Earl of Douglas, granted Little Drumwhindle dilecto scutifero Patricio Reedie Ramsay; these lands descended to William of Colliston 1441-62; Patrick of Colliston 1482-1509; Thomas of Colliston 1538; Gilbert of Colliston, who had a Crown charter, 1539, to him and Jean his spouse, daughter of Sir Robert Carnegie of Kinnaird, and was alive 1567; William of Colliston 1574; Gilbert of Colliston, father of Andrew of Colliston, who was served heir in 1600, and had issue secretary to James VL, John, the translator of
d.s.p.
;
;
"
;
;
William,
who
d.s.p.,
and Margaret, and
Violet, heirs-portioners of their
brother, 1636. About 1730, arms with a crescent in chief for difference, were registered by Andrew Reid, of St Martin's-in-the-Fields, Westminster ; the
eagle
armed and membered
is
or.
In 1764 Alexander Reid of Strathloch, paternally descended from Alexander Rua, i.e., red or Reid, a younger son of Patrick, founder of the Robertsons of Lude, registered arms first and fourth, argent, an eagle an imitation of displayed gules beaked and membered azure, apparently the Colliston coat, with which he had nothing to do second and third, Robertson. Strathloch was acquired by Alexander Rua's marriage to Matilda, to whom it was daughter and heir of Thomas de Atholia or Duncanson, till about granted by Robert III., c. 1402, and remained in the family an General Reid, the last of the direct line, having only child, 1780. who d.s.p. of Ballindean, of wife Stark M.D., Robertson, Susannah, John of music in the Uni1838, left the bulk of his fortune to endow a chair barons Rua or Reid, as known The family were versity of Edinburgh. and was held of the Earls of although Strathloch was not a barony, Athole for several generations they used the surname of Robertson. In 1767 William Reid of Blegbie, in East Lothian, had a grant of a of coat, which is a typical example of bad heraldry, being compounded the entirely different bearings of three families who have no common
—
;
;
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
368
—argent, on
a chevron between two eagles in chief sable beaked gules, and a buck's head erased in base of the last a cross between two mullets or. fitchde crosslet *Rae. Major Adam Rae registered 1672-78 argent, three roebucks in full course gules crest, a roebuck standing at gaze proper ; motto " In omnia prompt us. Sir James Balfour gives argent, three roes trippant gules. Pont has the coat as recorded, while Porteus makes the roebucks proper. origin
and membered
—
—
;
—
Adam
Rae, proprietor of lands in the shires of Perth, Stirling, and Forfar, which were united into the barony of Pitsindie, bore the three roebucks, and was dead in 16 18, leaving three daughters. Colonel James of Goldenhuife, co. Stirling, a member of the Committee of Estates in 1644, died in 1650, leaving a son, James of Goldenhuife.
Archibald, merchant, burgess of Glasgow, married Christian, daughter and heir of John Jack of Tannochside, co. Lanark, who was dead in 1678, On the death of Archibald Rae of Tannochside, he was succeeded by his cousin John Rae of Little Govane, to whom arms were granted 1758 vert, a chevron argent between three roebucks in full course proper.
—
Stacie gives this coat for Rae with the roebucks or, about 1680. His brother and successor, Colin of Little Govane, married Margaret, On the death of daughter of Sir John Stuart of Castlemilk, Baronet. her brother Francis Stuart Crawford of Milton, in 1793, she inherited his Mr Rae was succeeded by his nephew, Robert estate, but had no issue. who assumed the surname of Rae. Houstoun, Thomas Ra occurs as a witness in or about 1290 William Raa had a pension 1329; Robert Raa was yeoman of the King's wardrobe 1474; Hugh Rea, sub-dean of Glasgow, died 1481. In 1758 David Rae, advohe cate, had a grant of arms vert, three roebucks in full course argent became a Senator of the College of Justice as Lord Eskgrove, and was created a baronet. Rutherford of Hunthill. Argent, within an orle gules three piles sable, on a chief of the second three martlets of the first. *Ralston. Arms registered 1672-78 by William of that Ilk argent, on a bend azure three acorns in the seed or two and one (?) crest, a falcon looking to the sinister motto, ''Fide et marte.'" When these arms were allowed as a quartering in 1861 to William Ralston Patrick of Roughwood, CO. Ayr, descended from Jean, daughter of Gavin Ralston of that Ilk, the acorns are on the bend, in the usual way, not two and one, and seem never to have been so borne. The arms of Ralston and Muirhead are the same. The bearings of William of that Ilk, three acorns on a bend, are cut on stone at Woodside, along with those of his wife, Ursula, daughter of William Mure of Glanderston. The name is taken from Ralston in Renfrewshire, and is to be met with early in the thirteenth century. Thomas Raulfeston of the county of Lanark, swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296. Mr John of Railstone or Raulston was secretary to the King, and sat in Parliament 1445, was Bishop of Dunkeld 1447-51, and Lord High Treasurer. Hew of that Ilk, in 1551, acquired Woodside, co. Ayr, which became the residence of his descendants. Ralston was sold in 1704 by Gavin of that Ilk, grandfather of Gavin, last of the direct line. He sold Woodside in 1 77 1, became barrack-master at Piershill, married Annabella, daughter ;
—
—
;
—
—
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
369
and heir of James Pollock of Arthurlie, and died 1819, leaving two coheiresses, who married Hugh Crawfurd of Kilblain and Colonel Studdert. A younger branch became seated at Warrickhill in Ayrshire 1790. The family, who were not of baronial rank, latterly assumed supporters, a man in armour and a horse. *Rankine. Pont gives azure, across pat6e or between four mullets but the three boars' crest, a star issuing from a crescent or argent heads are the principal charges in the arms recorded by Walter of Orchardhead, CO. Stirling, and by Alexander, merchant in Perth, 1672-78. Also in 1679 for Henry, merchant in Rochelle, descended from the Rankens of
—
;
;
Shiells, Ayrshire.
There were small landed proprietors of the name in Ayrshire before the end of the fifteenth century. Mr Gabriel, portioner of Bothkennar, was father of Walter of Orchardhead, who married Sarah Little, and their son, succeeding his uncle William Little of Over Liberton, near Edinburgh, assumed the surname of his mother, and was ancestor of Walter James Little-Gilmour of Liberton, &c., who quarters Ranken. The Campbells of Skerrington also quarter Ranken by descent from A Abigail, daughter and heir of William of "Bankhead, in Ayrshire. " pedigree in Paterson's History of Ayrshire traces her and the Rankens of Whitehill from Peter of Sheill, living in 1508, but it is shown to be incorrect by an inquisitio de tutela, 1679, and the coat they quarter differs both in tinctures and charges from that of Henry in 1679, *Sharp. This is given by Pont and Porteus, and was registered by motto James, Archbishop of St Andrews, with the mullet sable " Ferio sed sano." He was son of James, sheriff-clerk of Banffshire, and had two brothers, Robert, sheriff-clerk of Banffshire, who purchased the Castlehill and other lands at Banff, and Sir William of Stoniehill, Keeper of the Signet, cashkeeper to His Majesty, and tacksman of customs, both of whom d.s.p. Sir William registered the arms with a bordure gules as his mark of cadency crest a pheon proper motto Progredere ne regredere." William of Scotscraig, co. Fife, and of Stoniehill, son of the primate, was knighted, and in 1683 created a baronet, with a grant of an augmentation to be borne in the first and fourth quarters azure, on a saltire argent (the arms of the See of St Andrews), a bleeding heart transfixed l^y two swords in saltire, points downwards proper, the heart having over it a mitre of gold tasselled gules placed on the field, all within a bordure or charged with the Royal tressure crest a celestial or martyr's crown or motto " Pro mitra coronam." It is expressly mentioned that his father " was horridly murthered by certaine persons of hellish and bloody prin;
;
—
;
—
—
''
—
—
;
—
;
ciples."
Sir William died in January 171 2, leaving by his wife Margaret, daughter of Sir Charles Erskine, Lord Lyon, a son. Sir James, who sold he left a son, Scotscraig and Stoniehill, and was designed of Strathtyrum without who di^d and Sir James of Strathtyrum, third issue; last(?) baronet, and a daughter, Mary Lilias, who married, in 1739, James Lumsdaine of ;
Rennyhill, co. Fife, and had issue. There are few early notices of this name 1433 Robert Sharp, 1454 Alexander of Strathy, co. Perth ; 1535 William, prenotary public of Traileou. ceptor In Dumfries a family of merchant burgesses flourished in the seven;
;
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
370
teenth century John sat in parliament for the burgh 1686, and John of Hoddam represented the county in the last Scottish parliament, and proArms were granted to Matthew of Hoddam tested against the Union. 1756 argent, on a fess azure between two cross crosslets fitchde sable, and a dexter hand couped grasping a sword in pale proper three mullets of His great-grandnephew and the first, a bordure engrailed of the second. his last heir, 1769, Charles Kirkpatrick, assumed the surname of Sharp when the William in of Hoddam, d.s.p. 1875, property surviving son, passed to Sir Thomas Kirkpatrick, and the Rev. William Bedford, who sold it. The chief family of the name was founded by Mr John Shairp, ;
—
;
advocate, who acquired Houstoun, co. Linlithgow, and Ballindoch and other lands in Forfarshire, was knighted, sat in parliament, was a comHe married twice, missioner for the Union in 1604, and died soon after. and had by the first marriage Mr John of Houstoun, and by the second Alexander of Milton of Craigie, co. Forfar, who d.s.p., and Sir William of Ballindoch. Sir William had one son, John of Ballindoch,
Mr
who
—
and two daughters Isabella, who married Robert Dunbar of Burgie, and married Robert Bruce^ of the Earlshall d.s.p.
1628,
,
family.
Mr A. H. Dunbar has kindly sent me a drawing of a stone at Burgie, 162 1, R. D. and I. S., with the three cushions of Dunbar impaled with the arms of Isobel Sharp, which are merely a dexter hand couped holding a dagger erect. In 1630 the laird of Houstoun and his nieces had a suit as to the succession under a mutual entail made by the former and his brother Sir William. Major William Shairp of Houstoun represented Linlithgowshire in parliament 1678, married Elizabeth Nicholson, and registered arms 1672-78 argent, on a fess azure between two cross crosslets fitchde sable, and a dexter hand couped grasping a sword in pale gules three mullets of the field crest a steel cap with a plume of feathers proper motto
—
—
;
;
—
" Vivit post funera virtus. He had four sons, John of Houstoun, d.s.p. Thomas of Houstoun, M.P. for the county, 1 700-1 707, married Anne, daughter and coheir of John Scott of Harden, and had a daughter Janet; Lieut.-Colonel William ;
of Kettleston, d.s.p. and Colonel William of Blance, in East Lothian, who married Janet, daughter and coheir of Sir Thomas Dalyell of Binns, baronet, and had a son, Thomas, who sue. to Houstoun as heirmale, and married his cousin Janet. Their eldest son Thomas of Hous;
toun, was great-grandfather of the present Lieut.-Colonel Thomas Shairp of Houstoun their second son, Walter, consul-general in Russia, was father of Sir Stephen Shairp, also consul-general in Russia, one of whose daughters married Captain Marryat, R.N,, the novelist. Strade. Gules, in dexter chief a mullet, in sinister chief a cross patde, and in base a crescent, all argent. *Symyne. Probably the old form of the coat of Syme, given in Pont as gules, a chevron between two spur rowels in chief and a halbert in base or this was one of the sixteen quarters of the Stair family for a as the mother of Margaret Ross, Lady Stair, was Sarah, daughter time, of Alexander Syme, advocate, son of Mr Alexander Syme of Hollybush, of advocate, commissary Edinburgh. ;
;
OF CHARLES US REIGN. The
seal of
Adam
Sime, chaplain of St Ninians, Leith, 1545
371
—
is
two
wolves' heads erased contourn^, in chief a mullet and in base a chalice William Sym, bailie of Edinburgh 1527, uses a chevron between three stars of six points and a Lochaber axe, *Spalding. This is also given with the addition of three crescents gules, and another entirely different coat, argent, on a cross azure five crescents or. The seal of John Spaildine, 1484, has a cross charged with a crescent that of David de Spalding, burgess of Dundee, 1445, is across charged with a cross crosslet fitch^e, or perhaps a sword as here repreIn the Lyon Register, 1672-78, sented, but with the point downwards. are Mr John Spalding, or, on a cross azure five cross crosslets of the co. Perth, or, a twofield, and a little later Andrew of Ashintully, handed sword paleways azure ; no crest and motto are entered, but those represented on an old flag in the possession of the present representative of this the chief family of the name, are a gateway proper, with the port" cullis half raised gules Mobile sermtium." These commemorate Peter de Spaldyng, burgess of Berwick-on-Tweed, who being on watch aided the Scotch to enter when the town was taken in 1318. He had a charter ;
;
—
from Robert I., ist May 1319, in exchange for his possessions at Berwick, of the lands of Ballourthy and Pitmethy, with the keepership of the royal forest of Kylgerry, and is said to have been murdered near Menmuir. He certainly was not the first of the name in Scotland, for Mr John was rector of Ochiltree, co. Ayr, and was succeeded there by his brother Mr Symund de Spalding, who in 1296 swore fealty to Edward I. Mr John had got promotion in the diocese of Aberdeen, and seems to have brought some of his kinsfolk north with him as in 1398, William Spaldyng is mentioned in the burgh records of Aberdeen, and Mr Patrick was Dean of Aberdeen soon after. Richard was custumar of Dundee 1342-79, and bailie of the burgh. Thomas was provost, 1499. David sat in Parlia-
burgh 1456, and William in 1543, and in 1584 William Mr John was dean of Brechin 1456-84, and the represented Forfar. asked the see of Dunkeld from the Pope for him, " his counsellor, King The Spaldings held lands in Fife confessor, and master of his chapel." and Forfarshire, but Spalding of Ashintully, co. Perth, was chief of the name, the first I have found with that designation being Andrew in 1581. " In 1587 the Spaldings figure in an Act of Parliament among the unruly In 1615 clans," and in 1594 are characterised as "wicked thieves." David of Ashintully obtained a Crown charter erecting his lands into a barony and free forestry with a weekly market at his burgh of barony of He was Kirkhillock, the patronage of the church of Kirkmichael, &c. taken prisoner by Argyll, and kept at Dunstaffnage till a payment of 4000 merks and his signature of the Covenant procured his release. On his death his cousin and successor William, who had also signed the Covenant, suffered from the other party, as Montrose burnt his house of of Ashintully, and laid waste his lands. His son Andrew had the barony Ashintully ratified to him 1677-81, and left, with other issue, David of His son Daniel joined the rising the folAshintully, who died in 1744. lowing year, was excepted from the general act of pardon, and in 1766 His younger brother Patrick, then apprenticed to Ashintully was sold. a jeweller in Edinburgh, was one of the persons wounded when Captain Porteous fired on the populace. He became a goldsmith in the Canon-
ment
for the
5 B
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
372
Joan Fulton, heiress of a merchant burgess of Edinburgh, and left a daughter Catherine. His uncle Andrew of Glenkilry left a son, George of Glenkilry, who became heir-male of the family, married Bethia, daughter and co-heir of Sir Thomas Nairne of Dunsinnane, baronet, and left a son, William of This gentleman married his cousin Wilhelmina Nairne Glenkilry. Mellis of Newhall, and was father of the late William Mellis Spalding, W.S., during whose minority Glenkilry was sold. He married Mary, daughter of William Gordon of Halmyre, co. Peebles, and left a son, who
gate, married
represents the family.
In 1577 Captain David was empowered to raise men to serve in the Low Countries. Several brothers of the name of Spalding settled in Sweden, and in 1675 a birthbrief was issued in favour of Gabriel, son of George of Milhaugh and Helen, daughter of William Ogilvie of Keillor, grandson of George of Grange of Airlie, by Isabel, daughter of Walter Ogilvy of Clova, great-grandson of Spalding of that Ilk, chief of his very ancient and noble race by a daughter of Garden of Latoun. His brother John held an official position at Gothenburg, and was recognised as noble in 1678 under the name of Spaldencreutz. Branches of the family also bore the surnames of Adlersparre and Hjelmberg. In Prussia the Spaldings bear parted per fess sable and azure, in chief a cross couped argent and in base two crescents with human faces, the lower one supporting three daggers, two in saltire and one in pale
downwards The Spada in
points
or.
Italy carry swords.
A
branch of Spalding of Ashin-
tully settled in Jamaica.
*ScouGAL OF THAT Ilk. This is givcu by Porteus, with the motto but the arms registered, 1672-78, by David, writer, in
— " Constanter ;"
-
— —
Edinburgh, descended from the family of that Ilk, are argent, two greyhounds courant fessways, in chief a hunting-horn sable, stringed and garnished gules, all within a bordure of the third crest ^a writing pen motto " HcBC ornant." The family of Scougal of Leith and Edinburgh, who claim to represent the painter, bear this with a crescent for crest, and " Tandem the motto implebiturr The lands of Scougal are in East Lothian, north of Dunbar, in the parish of Whitekirk, and gave a surname to their owners, who intermarried with Congalton of that Ilk, Wauchope of Niddrie, Herring of TuUiebole, &c. one of the charges Patrick Scougal was a Knight of St John 1465 made, in 1479, against the Duke of Albany was the cruel slaughter of John of Scougal John of that Ilk, 1587, is the last I have found in pos-
—
;
;
—
;
;
session of the old family estate. The inscription on the monument erected at Aberdeen, by his son James, to Patrick, Bishop of Aberdeen, describes him as son of Sir John of that Ilk, which is a mistake, but it is not unlikely that he represented the family. John Scougal, writer in Edinburgh, was father of Alexander, who
Mr
who acquired Whitekirk, adjoining Scougal his of Whitekirk, first designed of Humbie, was a judge, John and after the Restoration a Senator of the College of Justice, and d.s.p. d.s.p.,
and
John,
;
eldest son. Sir in
January 1672. Patrick, his
younger brother and
heir, after
holding several livings.
OF CHARLES
I.'S
m
REIGN.
was consecrated Bishop of Aberdeen in 1664, was Chancellor of the University, married Anne Congalton, and died 1682, leaving issue 1. Mr John, commissary of Aberdeen, had a son Patrick, who d.s.p., and a daughter Margaret of Whitekirk, Dreghorn, &c„ who married William Bennet, afterwards Sir William Bennet of Grubbet, co. Rox-
—
burgh, baronet, s.p. 2. Rev. Henry, Professor of Divinity in King's College, Aberdeen, author of " The Life of God in the Soul of Man," died unmarried 1678. 3. Sir James, Professor of Civil Law in King's College, Rector of the University, Commissary of Aberdeen and afterwards of Edinburgh, bought Whitehill and Boddam, co. Aberdeen, Senator of the College of Justice, 1696, as Lord Whitehill, sat in parliament for Kintore 16931702, succeeded to Whitekirk on the death of his niece, d.s.p. in December
—
1702.
Katherine married first, William Scroggie, Bishop of Argyle, and had issue she married, secondly, a gentleman of the name of Mackenzie, and on the death of her brother, Sir James, succeeded to his 1.
;
estates. 2.
Joanna, married Patrick Sibbald, D.D., Professor of Divinity in
King's College. Captain Richard Scougal was mortally wounded at the siege of Merchiston Castle, in May 1572, and James was Lieutenant-Colonel of the Earl of Annandale's Regiment in the reign of Charles L John Scougal, elder, the portrait painter, is said to have been a relative of the bishop his son, the younger John Scougal, also a portrait married a painter, daughter of John Gordon of Seaton, co. Aberdeen, and died in 1730, aged eighty-five, leaving four daughters. *Smyth {bis). In " Notes and Queries" for 1873, will be found an account of the Heraldry of Smith in Scotland, by the late Francis Montagu Smith, Captain Royal Artillery, so exhaustive that there is only one coat to be added to it, that given in the Funeral Escutcheons of the Don family, for Smith, portioner of Dunse, father of Isabel Lady Don azure, on a chevron or between three flames of fire proper, a mullet pierced ;
—
of the
field.
The family from which Captain Smith descended possessed landed property at Inveresk from the fifteenth century; Thomas, portioner of Inveresk, J. P. 1656, married Isobel, sister and coheir of Colonel Archibald Strachan William, notary public, 1662, married Margaret, daughter and coheir of John Carse of Monktounhall, by his wife Christian, sister and coheir of Sir Thomas Kellie of Myreside James, of Whitehill in Inveresk, was Master of the King's work, married Janet, daughter of Robert Mylne of Balfarg, master mason to His Majesty, and azure, three flames of fire or, on a chief argent, a thistle registered arms '' Non invitdr Rev. William of Minerva's head; motto vert; crest Cranston, married Jane, daughter and coheir of James Baird of Chester" hall. Genealogical CollecCaptain Smith edited, in 1870, the Baird ;
;
—
—
—
"
tions of the last laird of Auchmedden. Sir John Smith of Grothill, Provost of Edinburgh, and
its
represen-
his arms are tative in parliament, was an influential personage 1638-63 on the house of Sir in stone cut given in Funeral Escutcheons, and William of Pittendrum, who married his sister Egidia azure, a ;
—
Gray
saltire
couped between four flames of
fire
within a bordure argent.
374
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
Or, a saltire azure between four crescents gules, is given by Pont, Porteus, and Stacie, and was borne by the family of Smith of InverIn 1697 John of ramsay, co. Aberdeen, with a martlet on the saltire. of to the descent who had gone to testifies George Smith, Inverramsay in 1687, and was probably his kinsman. Peter Smith, an officer in the Swedish army of Scottish birth, was cat salient or ennobled in 1640 under the surname of Rosenschmit. sejant is borne by the families of Balharry, Camno, and Smithfield, probably to indicate a claim to descent from a member of the Clan Chattan, but when John Smith, merchant in Gothenburg, whose ancestors resi" are said to be descended from the dent at Banchory in Aberdeenshire, ancient family of Mackintosh of that Ilk," had a grant of arms in 1790, the cat is not permitted to appear. The coat is azure, three flames of fire or, a bordure argent charged with six chess rooks sable. In 1763 a singular grant was made to William Smith, Clerk of Chancery, said to be descended from the Smiths of Braco, parted per fess, in chief the arms of that family, and in base those given in Pont's M.S. This gentleman, who was son of Alexander Smith, surgeon, and grandson of Alexander Smith, merchant and dean of guild in Linlithgow, He married Anne, acquired the estate of Bonsyde, near Linlithgow. of and heir William Drummond of Boreland, and some Major daughter of his descendants assumed the surname of Drummond. James Smith of Bonsyde married Janet, daughter and coheir of the Honourable James Home of Ayton. Sarah Anne Drummond Smith was mother of the present Sir Charles Wyville Thomson of Bonsyde. In 1673 Patrick Smith of Braco, descended from Thomas Smith,
Dantzick
A
—
arms azure, a burning cup between He acquired Methven, now the seat of his descenthe name dant, being latterly altered to Smythe. Patrick of Braco, father of Patrick first of Methven, had property in Orkney, where he resided and married Catherine, daughter of George Graham of the Inchbrakie family. Bishop of Orkney. On the monument of two of their daughters, who died in 1662-66, the arms are a cup on a tall stand with three flames issuing from it, on the dexter side a charge more resembling a candlestick than a chess rook, and on the sinister an escallop (the Graham bearing) pendent from a ribbon issuing from the chief. The family of Smith alias Lindsay, hereditary smiths and armourers of the lordship of Brechin, bear or, an eagle displayed gules charged on the breast with a horse-shoe or. In 1802 John Smith of Craigend, co. an estate an ancestor about the time of the RestorStirling, acquired by obtained a of chevron arms gules, a ation, ermine, between two grant crescents in chief and a garb in base or. Agnes Graham Smith, heiress apothecary to James two chess rooks or.
III., registered
—
of Craigend, married David, Earl of Buchan. Robert Smyth, son of Robert, clerk of the burgh of Pittenweem, was appointed clerk of the Lyon Court in 1663, purchased Giblistoun in He had a grant in 1672 of the Fife, and died in 1707, leaving issue. arms with the saltire given from G. crest a writing pen and an ear of wheat in saltire proper motto " His Deus ditat." He was afterwards allowed to drop the two crescents, to use as crest a crescent, with the motto, " Cum plena magis.'" The last of his descendants left the estate to Robert Gillespie, no relative, who assumed the surname of ;
Smyth.
—
—
;
OF CHARLES US REIGN,
375
Porteus gives for Spot or Sprot, parted per bend dan*Spott. and sable two annulets counterchanged. In 1296 Eliz de Spott of the county of Edinburgh, and Hugh, son of Moyses de Spott of Berwickshire did homage to Edward I. Elias was falconer to Patrick, Earl of Dunbar. William was at the same time In 1396 Duncan, a merchant in Edinburgh, had vicar of Tyningham. an English safe-conduct. Adam, James, and John of Spot occur early in the fourteenth century as landowners in Tweeddale. Ninian of Spot, canon of Dunkeld, was comptroller, and sat in Parliament 1458. In 1 40 1 Adam was dean of guild of Edinburgh, where a tenement had been granted by Robert III. to Laurence Spott. Stenhop. Or, a stag's head erased sable, agyron gules issuing from the dexter, and on a chief azure three mullets argent another coat-argent, a stag's head erased azure on a chief dancettd embattled gules three cett6 argent
;
mullets of the
first.
*Symmer of Balzordie,
CO.
Forfar.
Porteus blazons the coat,
argent, an oak-tree in bend sinister vert, or proper, surmounted of a bend charged with three crosses humett6 or. Pont makes the bend gules. This family possessed Balzordie in 1450. George represented the county in Parliament 1649 Colin, the last laird, was dead in 1737, being succeeded by his sister Magdalene, wife of David Doig of Cookston. In 1362 David II. granted to William Somyr for life an annual rent of forty shillings. Nisbet engraves the arms of John Symmer, accountant to the Equivalent Office, with a bordure gules for difference crest a Tandem He left issue. couchant motto—" Tranquillus." stag *Sprottie. Sir James Balfour gives the same. Hugh Sprot, burgess of Urr, witnessed a charter of Eustace Baliol in the reign of Alexander III. ScROGGiE. See W. Azure, a chevron between two branches in chief and a crescent in base argent in middle chief a mullet or. ScRiMGER, of old called Carron, gules, three sickles argent handles or fessways in pale, the handles to the sinister, in base two curved ;
;
—
;
;
blades
(?)
in saltire of the third,
perhaps intended for a fer-de-mouline.
Or, two martlets in chief and a lion's head erased in Balfour and Pont give or, a lion's head erased gules between
*Smetone.
base gules. three papingoes vert. In 1296 Henry de Smytheton, of the county of Edinburgh swore fealty to
Edward
I.
He
belonged to a family taking their surname from the lands of Smytheton or Smythetun, now Smeaton, near Musselburgh. Gilbert de Smythetun left a son, Nicholas, and a daughter and heir, Emma, who, in She married William de Smytheton, probably the 1253, was a widow.
William to whom his brother Gilbert granted a charter of the lands of Witker they were sons of Robert de Smytheton. Henry, 1296. Henry was on an assize at Musselburgh in 1359. Mr Thomas a Jesuit priest, and- a man of learning, became a Protesdied in 1583.tant, was Principal of the University of Glasgow 1580, and One of the name was hanged in 1593 for breaking ward out of EdinIn the seventeenth century burgh Castle along with Mr George Ker. Perthshire. Smeatons were landowners in SwiNTON. Sable, a chevron or between three boars' heads erased ;
argent.
5c
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
376
Stevenson. Argent, a chevron gules between three cocks' heads erased sable another coat, argent, on a chevron azure between three cocks' heads erased gules a fleur-de-lis or. Smert. Or, a fleur-de-lis sable between three boars' heads erased Balfour gives argent, a chevron between three pheons sable. In azure. of obtained a safe conduct to Haddington, merchant, 1362 John Smert In 1422 Henry Smert was prisoner of Galfrid Lowther visit England. in England, and was allowed to visit Scotland to arrange for payment of ;
ransom. In Edinburgh there was a burgess family in the seventeenth century; Alexander Smart of Wester, co. Caithness, had one son, Alexander, who d. s. p. before 1697, and a daughter, Janet, wife of Alexander Stewart, writer in Edinburgh, who had one daughter, Christina, heir of her uncle. *Sands. This resembles one of the coats of Sandys in England, a fess dancett6e or indented between three cross crosslets fitchde.
The
other English coat, argent, a cross raguly sable, is given by the cross, however, being described as regrailed or trunked. Porteus, " Stacie has argent a cross raguly sable for Sands, English, the same for " and gives another " Sands, az, an hand fesswayes holding Scotsmen " a winge volant in paile argt. for Scottmen an ould armes 1617 as he also gives the coat with the fess and crosslets as English, it would appear that he was anxious to make it clear which of the different coats were Scotch. The family took their surname from the lands of Sands, near Culross, which, in 1494, were in the possession of Thomas Sands and his mother, Isobel Hudson. In 1638 John Sands was served heir of his father, John of that Ilk, in half of Sands and Kelliewood. Several branches of the family were resident in the neighbourhood, the Sands of Langside, which was in the possession of John early in the as seventeenth century. William Sands of Langside, W.S., d. s. p. in 1783, ;
;
leaving two sisters, of Inzievar.
;
Agnes and Catherine, who married James Harrower
William Sands of Birkenhead, which had belonged to his ancestors for several generations, died in 1675, and was succeeded by his sisters. Patrick Sands was a regent in the University of Edinburgh 1589, and married Margaret Aikenhead, sister of David, ProPrincipal 1620.
Mr
He
vost of Edinburgh, without issue. *Vernour. Another coat azure, a fess argent between three boars' heads couped or. Porteus and Pont make the boars' heads sable and the
—
latter says
couped. 291 Thomas le Venour, burgess of Berwick, swore fealty to Edward I. In 1450, William Vernour, and other merchants, obtained an English safe-conduct; 1478, William claimed lands in Edinburgh, as heir of his brother John Vernour. In the sixteenth century, Auchindinny, near Edinburgh, was the property of the Vernours William was bailie of Edinburgh 1456 a family held lands in Inveresk of the Abbots and Lords of Dunfermline. The Verners, baronets of Ireland, claim descent from this stock.
In
1
;
Umfrestoune.
W. —argent,
a chief gules three wolves'
Vans of Menie.
;
(?)
three trefoils slipped, one heads erased or.
and two, on
Gules, on a bend between two cinquefoils argent,
three mullets of the field.
OF CHARLES US REIGN.
iTj
'Winchester. The seal of Thomas, appended to his deed of homage to Edward I., bears a Hon rampant. Thomas, Thomas tenant of the King in the county of Ayr, and Henry and John de Wincestre of the county of Lanark, all did homage 1296. The curious seals of David Vynchester, bailie of St Andrews 1524,
—
and of George, also connected with that city, give a griffin as a supporter on the sinister side of a shield, a tree fructed growing from the base, on either side of it a bird pecking at the fruit, over all a chevron charged with three mullets.
John Winchester was Bishop of Moray 1437-60. blazon of the arms registered, 1672-78, by Captain Peter Winchester is argent, a vine tree growing out of the base leaved and fructed between two papingoes endorsed, feeding upon the clusters " Hoc ardua proper crest a hand holding a cluster of grapes motto
The
;
— —
—
;
vincere docet." To the St Andrews family, probably, belonged Ann Winchester, one of Queen Anne's household, who in 1593 married John, eldest son of Andrew Wemyss of Myrecairnie, Senator of the College of Justice, on which occasion the lands of his family, in the county of Fife, were erected into a free barony. Alexander, owner of lands near St Andrews, was father of Alexander of Kinglassie and Polduff, whose son. Captain James of Kinglassie and Polduff, died about 1648, leaving two daughters, and the estates were sold.
In the north, 1569 Peter of Ardtrailzie; 1555 Tyberius, chaplain in the diocese of Moray ; Florence, minister and vicar of Aberchirder, 1567-95; Alexander, bailie of Banff, 1646-59; a Roman Catholic bishop who resided in the house of the Duke of Gordon, in the end of the seventeenth century Ensign James Winchester was with his Grace when he Mr James, from Morayshire, held out in Edinburgh Castle 1689 minister of Jedburgh, married Mary Dunbar, heiress of the Dunphail family, who died in 1750, leaving issue. Williamson. Argent, a saltire between two mullets in flank sable, and two boars' heads erased in chief and base gules. *VoLUM. Seal of Alexander Wolleme, 1525, two bars dancettde. John de Velham was on an assize at Brechin 1364 Robert II., in the fourth year of his reign, grants lands in Alyth, resigned by John de Welhame, to Sir James Lindsay; George Wellem of Woodwrae, co. Forfar, 1454; David of Woodwrae 1488, Alexander of Woodwrae 1514-19. Woodwrae passed into the hands of the Lindsay family, but persons of the name of Vollum were resident in the district long after. Walker. Azure, on a fess or two crescents gules, in chief the sun in his splendour, and in base a bird azure emerging from water. Another coat paly of six or and gules, on a chief azure a crescent of the first between two mullets argent. Irvine of Drum. Lindsay, Balfour, Porteus, &c., all give argent, Here there are three small bundles of holly, each three holly leaves vert so registered, consisting of as many leaves slipped vert banded gules motto—" Sub sole sub 1672-78, with crest—a bundle of nine holly leaves the head and middle about wreathed and two umbra virens ;'" savages all with holly, each holding a baton in his hand proper, as supporters. The seal of Alexander Irvine of Belties, 1483, is described by Mr ;
;
;
—
;
;
GENTLEMEN'S ARMS
378
Laing as, two cross crosslets bunches of holly leaves.
fitchde,
surmounted of a
fess
between three
" aliter of Bonshaw," and Stacie gives for leaves Bonshaw argent, three holly proper or vert, with three or five drops of blood at each of them the coat recorded, 1672-78, by William In the Lyon Register of Bonshaw is— argent, three holly leaves proper. of cadets all out this distinction, those matriculations the numerous carry descended from Bonshaw having three leaves, and those from Drum three
Porteus gives for
—
Drum
;
bunches of
leaves.
The surname
Robert de probably taken from the locality Hirewine witnessed a charter of Alexander II. in 1226, and one of Gameline, Bishop of St Andrews, is witnessed by Robert de Iruwyn about 1260. Reginald de Irewin was Archdeacon of Teviotdale 1242. Robert I., in 1323, granted to William de Irwin part of the Royal forest of Drum in free forestry, and the following year granted him a second charter of the same lands as a free barony. In 1388, Alexander of Irwyne, lord of the Droum, purchased the park of Drum from John Moigne. The family suffered heavily during the civil war, and in 1684, as a recompense, the tenure of the lands they held ward, was changed from simple ward to taxed ward. William of Irwyn was clerk of the register 1329, and about the same Thomas de time Roger of Irwyn was clerk of the King's wardrobe. Irvine was on committees of parliament 1368-69. Alexander of Drum sat in the general council 1441, and the heads of the family were very frequently afterwards in parliament. John Irvine sat as depute-marischal is
;
in 1584.
The male
line of
Bonshaw has remained unbroken, and
the present understood to be the heir-male of
Alexander Forbes-Irvine of Drum is the Aberdeenshire line, although the estates, under an entail executed in 1687 by Alexander of Drum, passed for a time to younger branches,
to the exclusion of the Irvines of Saphock. Alexander, the last of this line, married Barbara Dundas of that Ilk, and had Margaret, who " died young at the scools in Ed"", and lyes in Dundass's Isle." At the funeral (? in 1742) of this young lady, her eight quarters were duly represented, and the undifferenced coat in a lozenge " with the supporters was allowed as her own arms, her father being heirmeal of Irvine of Drum." Her sister Mary inherited Saphock, married, Her in 1744, Sir Alexander Ramsay, baronet, of Balmain, and d. s. p. husband assumed the surname of Irvine in addition to and after Ramsay. From the Irvings of Saba in Orkney, seated there from 1440, descended George Irving, designed of Tullich, went to Washington Irving. His Sweden as a military officer, and was recognised as noble in 1647. son Alexander of Irvingsholm rose to high rank in the army, and married Agnes Patkull, maid of honour to Queen Christina.
*Wellwood. Arms registered by Henry Welwood of Garvock, co. Fife, who died in 1758, argent, an oak-tree acorned growing out of a well in base proper "
motto —
;
crest
— the trunk of an oak sprouting out branches proper
;
Reviresco." In 1769 two eagles as supporters were granted to Robert of Garvock, advocate. In 1437 Willyhame of Walwod was one of the judges compositors of a dispute as to boundaries between the Abbot of Dunfermline and David Halkett of Lumfennan and Pitfirrane.
\
OF CHARLES US REIGN. on
1490, Alan of an assize there,
In 1576 in 1578
Mr
Walwode, c.
bailie of
Dunfermline.
379
John Wallud was
1494.
William was Professor of
Thomas
Civil
Law
at
St Andrews, and
represented the city in parliament. Part of Touch, near Dunfermline, was in the possession of John Wellwood 1566. Garvock was acquired in 1704 by Robert of Touch, and his son Henry bought Pitliver in 1736. The male line became extinct on the death of Andrew Moffat Wellwood of Garvock and Pitliver in 1847. Mr Clarke-Preston of Valleyfield is heir of line, but the estates have passed under an entail to the of Maconochie. family WiLKiE. Sable, a fess tortillde or and azure between three crescents argent.
*WoRDiE. The blazon of this rather remarkable coat as registered 1672-78 by John of Torbrecks, co. Stirling, is argent, a hand issuing from the dexter side of the shield grasping a garland ensigned with an imperial crown all proper, on a chief gules two thistles argent; motto ''Nil
—
indigney Torbrecks was in the possession of this family for several genera-
tions. Dene Thomas Wordye, in 1557, was a monk of Cambuskenneth, and William Wordye was the same year procurator for the commendator, David, Bishop of Ross. *ZowLLE. Arms were registered 1 676 by William Yule of Leyhouses, CO. Haddington, argent, on a fess sable between two crescents in chief and a saltire couped in base gules a garb or and the same year by John Yule of Darleith, co. Dumbarton, argent, on a fess between three crescents Darleith was acquired in 1670 by John, sable a garb or banded gules. son of Thomas Zuill, and remains the property of his descendant. John sat in parliament for Inveraray 1661. The family to which Sir George Udny Yule, K.C.S.I. belongs claims descent from a younger brother of Leyhouses, and in 1824 Colonel Udny Yule, C.B., registered the coat of that family with the addition of two water-bougets or on the fess, to indicate maternal descent from Rose of ;
Kilravock. In 1825 Captain Patrick Yule, Royal Engineers, claimed to be chief of the name, as representative of the Leyhouses family. John Yule of Garmiltoune the name occurs in East Lothian 157 1 in the fifteenth century.
—
;
5D
XIII.
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
i
I
BoE OF
Stain. John of Staine, near Biggar, left two coheirs, Agnes of Staine, married John Dickson, and was mother of John Dickson of Hartree, Senator of the College of Justice 1649 and Janet, who married, ;
in 1619, Patrick Tweedie of Oliver, and had issue. The name of Bo, Boe, Bowie, or Bullo, is an old one in Tweeddale. Part of Bonnington. near Peebles, was held by the Bullos of Bonnington-Bullo, during nearly the whole of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Ellies of Elliestoun. See W. Scott of Harden. Seal of William of Harden, 1540
—abend charged
—
with a crescent between two mullets of Walter of Sinton, 1550 a bend charged with a mullet in the upper part, and two crescents in the lower. ;
The
coat reproduced is that registered, 1672-78, by Sir William of " Pacem amo^ Harden, with a stag trippant for crest, and the motto Mr George of Boonraw, representer of the old family of Sintoune, at the same time recorded or, two mullets in chief and a crescent in a nymph, in her dexter hand the sun, and in her crest base azure sinister the moon, all proper motto " Repayabit cornua Phcebe!' On 27th November 1700, Archibald of Boonraw executed a renunciation and conveyance of his right to these bearings in favour of Sir William Scott of Harden, who then matriculated the coat, and was allowed supporters two mermaids, each holding in her exterior hand a mirror all proper, " as having right and title to represent the said ancient family of Syntoune in manner above sett downe." Archibald is said to have died unmarried in 1720, but the Scotts of Whitslaid claimed to be next heirs-male of Sinton they became extinct in 1757. Thomas of Whitslaid and Thomas of Todrick, both registered arms, 1672-78 or, on a bend azure a star between two crescents of the field, and in chief a broken lance gules, with a difference for Todrick as a cadet. Gladstains of Whitelaw, who was descended in the female line from the Scotts of Synton, says in his MS. genealogy, that the arms were represented at Whitslaid with two mermaids as supporters. The coat of Todrick, as cut in wood on their pew in the church of
—
;
—
—
;
—
—
;
—
Ashkirk, with the date 1622, had a buck's head in base and no lance; this was a younger branch of Harden, and its representative, William, M.D., of Stokoe, in Northumberland, in 1783, published a pedigree of this was his family, in which he claimed to be senior to Harden his grandson, William Robson Scott, M.D., of St reprinted in 1852 ;
by
Leonards', Exeter.
In Berwickshire there were also Craws of Swinewood, Reston, Netherbyres, Haughhead, &c. George, of Easter Reston, registered arms, 1672-7&; his family were seated there in the beginning of the sixteenth century George, having taken part in the rising of 17 15, his forfeited estate was sold. Alexander Craw sold Haughhead before 1755;, the Netherbyres family
Craw of Gunsgreen.
;
retained their estate
till
Janet, daughter of
the present century.
James Craw, a merchant burgess of Edinburgh,
5E
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
384
having married Sir Andrew Ramsay of Abbotshall, Provost of Edinburgh, and Senator of the College of Justice, is allowed eight quarters in her funeral entry as a descendant of Gunsgreen. Nisbet calls Craw of Auchincraw, chief of the name, and says they bore these arms with the chevron plain that family was Auchincraw or Adincraw of that Ilk, and the Craws were formerly as often called AuchIn 1489 John Stephen Craw had a respite, for holding Dumbarincraw. ;
ton Castle against the King.
Skene of Curriehill. LUNDIE OF THAT IlK. Marshall. See G. The
coat here reproduced is from the Funeral sixteen with Escutcheon, quarters, sanctioned by Sir Alexander Erskine, Andrew Marshall, 1695, who was born 1643, son of John of Lyon, for Clothoderick, in the parish of Kilbarchan, and Helen Napier his wife, of " the Kilmahew family Crest a trefoil slipped proper motto Semper
—
—
;
These arms are registered, 1672-78, for him under the designation of merchant in Queensbrugh. The leaves are edock leaves. Ninian Marshall possessed Clothoderick in 1503. In 1292 John Marshall, burgess of Berwick, swore fealty to Edward Seal semde of cross crosslets fitchde three horseshoes. A seal, in I. the Record Office, of another John, has three horseshoes, and probably was appended to the deed of homage of John Marshall 1296 in 1292 Fergus Marshall also swore fealty, and his seal has one horseshoe not on a shield. virescit virtus."
—
;
nineteen persons of the name took the oath to the King of EngThomas of land, some were burgesses, two have territorial designations William of co. co. and Berwick Morthington, Corstorphyn, Edinburgh, one was a knight. Sir John le Mareschal of Tosketon in Wigtownshire. It has been said that the Marshalls are a branch of the great house of Keith Marischal, but this seems improbable. Sir Malcolm was proprietor of Essilmont and Arnage in Aberdeenshire he left a daughter, Afifrica, who was a widow in 1378, and a son Malcolm, who resigned these lands in favour of his son William, who had a Crown charter 1377 ; the heiress married Cheyne, who quartered Porteus calls them argent, three leaves slipped vert, for Marshall.
In
—
all,
;
;
—
docken leaves. In Perthshire there were Marshalls of Innerpethie 1577, of Pitcairns Charles 1584-1676. John was provost and custumar of Perth 1329-30. Marshall of Alauna (?), in the parish of St Ninians, was father of William, Colonel of Horse in the service of Charles I. he was taken prisoner and made his escape from the Castle of Edinburgh, along with Lord Kinnoull and others, 28th May 1654. Charles II., by patent, dated at Brussels, 2ist May 1658, created him a baronet, and granted him a very distinguished coat of arms the Royal arms of Scotland with the addition of a a stag trippant motto crest regal crown on the head of the lion " Fortiter.'" Sir William died at Ghent the same year his son settled in America, and neither he nor his descendants assumed the title, but bore the arms. Charles Marshall, the last heir male, died in 1816 unmarried, and his sister, Rachel, is represented by Captain Hans Busk. Tyrie of Drumkilbo. Some MSS. have three torteaux Sir Patrick Home gives for Tyrie of Lunan, the same family sable a chevron between three plates, each charged with a cross between the capital letters ;
—
;
—
;
;
—
J and S, also sable.
;
—
FUN'ERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
385
Mr
Jervise describes a mutilated stone in the ruins of the Church of with an inscription and the initials J. T., as Essie, having a chevron between two crescents, impaling a lion rampant. At Durisdeer, in Aberdeenshire, there is a stone over the doorway with the initials J. T. M. T. and a chevron between two 1675 John Tyrie Margaret Tulloch crescents, impaling Tulloch. In 1296, Marice de Tiry of Perthshire swore fealty to Edward I.; of held of which descended to his great-grandson James Lunan, Tyry part Walter of Lunan, who had also lands in Forteviot 1478-82 Walter of Drumkilbo, probably the same person, was grandfather of William of Drumkilbo, who, in 1532, possessed half of Lunan David of Drumkilbo,
—
—
;
;
;
was
1564,
father of
by Adam
David of Drumkilbo, who was
killed in
December
Crichton, fiar of Ruthven, leaving a son and heir, William, 58 then under age, his tutor being Thomas Tyrie, who was concerned in the schemes of the Roman Catholic party, and corresponded with James William of Drumkilbo was Tyrie, a Jesuit priest resident at Rome. and died i8th knighted, September 1633, leaving a son Sir Thomas of Drumkilbo, who served under Montrose 1644. Several persons of the name were magistrates of Perth 1477, and Sir John was provost of the Collegiate during the next fifty years. Church of Methven 1488- 1523 his brother Robert, and Agnes Aberin his had a tack of Busbie in Methven, and in 1510 wife, 1506, cromby the brothers had a Crown charter of that property, which remained in the family for nearly two hundred years. Durisdeer, which is in the parish of Insch, was the property of another branch, during the seventeenth and 1
1
;
eighteenth centuries.
From the Funeral Escutcheon of Sir second baronet of James Hall, Dunglass the first baronet was son of Hall and John Janet Higgins, his wife, and her mothei* was a Goodlet. The arms, singularly enough, are those allowed to the family of Goodricke in England, at the Herald's Visitations of York and Lincolnshires. In Stacie's MS. there is " Gudlade alias Prestone of Absuch, near Falkirk parted per fess argent and vert, two unicorns' heads couped sa, and one of the first guttd gules all armed or, 167 1." This was recorded c. 1750, as a quartering by James Goodlatt Campbell of Auchlyne and •GooDLET OF Abbotshaugh.
;
—
Abbotshaugh, grandson of Agnes Goodlatt. The surname is an old one, and occurs
the neighbourhood of Stirling in the fifteenth century in the sixteenth, persons of the name were landowners at Strathbrock and Uphall one of them married the in
;
;
heiress of
John Graham
of Kilpont about 1550,
Mrs Janet Williehamina Maxwell Stewart Campbell represents the family of Goodlet-Campbell
of Cloichfoldich
of Auchlyne and
Abbots-
haugh. In 1609 James Guidlett in Strabrok applied for a grant of two thousand acres of forfeited land in. Ulster, and the family then founded in Ireland is still represented there. A monument in their burying ground records the death, Thonice Goodlate, generosi, in March 1624, aged fortynine, and the arms on it are three unicorns' heads couped two and one and three mullets, one in fess point, the others in chief between the two heads.
Bennet of Chesters. parted per pale argent and
surname Sir James Balfour has, a fess sable, parted per pale gules and or.
For
this
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
386
Pont, g^Ies, a cross (patde) or between three mullets argent ; aliter-2iZuvQ, fitchde argent. Porteus gives both these, and that the latter sometimes has is for Chesters, saying that the former No arms are registered for the the addition of three mullets or in chief. in his collection those of the two baronets the herald Stacie but name, gives a of native Sir George, created in 1670-71. Fife, distinguished in the service of the King of Poland, gules, on a chevron between three stars argent as many crosses patde of the first ; crest a demi-lion argent holding in his " Pie et fortiter." Sir William dexter-paw a cross patde gules ; motto of Grubbet, gules, a cross patde or between three stars argent, a chief of a hand issuing from a cloud holding a cross patde crest the second *' fitch^e or, or a cross of calvary proper; moXXo — Benedictus qui toilet
on a rock or a cross patde
— —
—
;
crticem."
This surname is to be met with in Fife in the fifteenth century. In 1459 Sir Richard Bennet, chaplain to James, Archbishop of St Andrews,
was presented
to the vicarage of Arbroath.
Alexander sat in parliament for Pittenweem 1649, and James for Inverkeithing 1667-78. There were Bennetts of Grange, Busses, Lumbo, and Westboth, in The principal family of the name was that whose arms are reproFife. Adam was seated at Chesters about 1580. His descendants duced. intermarried with the Douglas, Langlands, Rutherford, and Scott families. Andrew of Chesters left three daughters Agnes, Helen, married Archibald Douglas of Tympendean, and Isobel married Archibald Hope, collector of excise at Haddington. They sold Chesters at the end of last ;
century.
Mr William, parson of Ancrum, a younger son of Chesters, acquired Grubbet his eldest son William was created a baronet Sir John, fifth and last baronet, died 1765; and the estate passed to Nisbet of Dirleton. James, second son of Mr William, went to Sweden about 1640, was Major in the army, and recognised as noble in 1675. His son, Colonel William, served with distinction under Charles XII., and was created a baron. ;
;
The
family lasted for several generations. This family, a cadet of Carberry, at one time carried a bordure. Nisbet describes the seal of Mr Hugh of Carberry, as in base in place of the fourth mullet. the crescent 1546, having Thomas Rigg of Downfield, co. Fife, M.D., representative of the
Rig of Aithernie.
Carberry family, registered about 1750 argent, a saltire vert between crest a cock sable beaked and armed gules motto Virtute et labored There are also entries by Thomas of Rigsland, vert, a 1672-78, and by his representative Thomas of Morton, 1772 saltire engrailed argent between a mullet in chief two garbs in fess and three roses in base or, a bordure of the third charged with eight crescents four mullets gules "
;
—
—
;
;
;
of the
field.
The Rigs were burgesses
of Dumfries and Annan, notaries, and small landowners in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright. They intermarried with Macmath of Auchenzie, Irving, Maxwell of Barncleugh, Johnstone of Mylnefield, &:c. The Johnstones of Galabank, descended from the marriage of John, provost of Annan, a cadet of Mylnefield, who acquired Galabank, and Giles Rig, cousin and disponee in 1627 of Marion, daughter and heir of William Rig, burgess of Annan, composed the coat of Rig with their
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
387
own, by cantonning the saltire with a mullet in chief and a rose in base gules and two garbs vert in flank. James Rig of Greinmerse married Barbara, sister and co-heir of Paul Reddik of Barscheine, who died before 1646, and this family lasted for several generations. Carberry, in Midlothian, was acquired by Hugh Rigg, advocate, about 1530. He was deputy-constable, and sat in parliament 1538-46. The descendants of his elder son retained Carberry till late in the seventeenth century. Patrick, younger son of Mr Hugh, was grandfather of William of Aithernie, merchant in Edinburgh, a bailie and member of parliament. After the extinction of his branch the representation devolved on the existing line; William acquired Downfield 1720, and his descendant is the present James Home-Rigg of Downfield and Tarvit. Rigsland and Morton were the property of a cadet branch, and passed to the elder line in terms of a disposition executed in 1784 by James Home-Rigg of Morton and Gamelshiels, excluding his sister Marjory, wife of Colonel John Houstoun. Walkinshaw of that Ilk. Crest a dove with an olive branch in " its beak motto " In season supporters two savages holding clubs over their shoulders. Gavin of that Ilk registered arms, c. 1680 argent, upon a mount in base a grove proper crest a martlet motto as above, but no supporters. " Crawfurd, in his History of Renfrew," says that the family bore two in long robes, allusive to their predecessor foresters supporters being Forester to the High Steward of Scotland in the barony of
—
—
;
;
;
—
—
—
;
—
Renfrew
(?).
The
lands from which this family took its name were held of the Abbot of Paisley James of that Ilk died 1636, leaving three daughters, who inherited Wester Walkinshaw, but his cousin and heir-male, Mr John of Garturk, took the designation of that Ilk, and inherited part of ;
Walkinshaw his son Gavin, in 1683, sold Walkinshaw to his cousin, James Walkinshaw, merchant in Glasgow, but retained the style of that Ilk, and died in December 17 13, leaving an only child, Robina, who inherited Drums and other lands. She married, in 17 19, John Craufurd, ;
younger of Craufurdland, who assumed her surname, and left an only child, Lieutenant-Colonel John Walkinshaw-Craufurd of Craufurdland and Walkinshaw, Falconer to the King in Scotland, who d.s.p, 1793. A younger son founded a family of wealthy Glasgow merchants, 'of
whom
John, a magistrate of the city 1655, acquired Barrowfield John, third of Barrowfield, having taken part in the rising of 17 15, his estate was forfeited and sold in 1723; he died before July 1731, leaving ten of daughters, of whom Clementina, Countess Alberstorff, mistress of Prince Charles Edward, and mother of Charlotte, Duchess Albany married of Princess the to Leonella, Wales; Catherine, housekeeper of first of son second Barrowfield, William Walkinshaw. James, John, was father of of his Walkinshaw, son, Walkinshaw; John acquired James of Walkinshaw, who married Margaret Walkinshaw, and left ;
;
three children;
James
sold
Anne died in 1769, and d.s.p. of the heiress family ; only child,
Walkinshaw
;
and Mrs Anderson, who left an Catherine, wife of Robert Davidson, advocate. Mackintosh of that Ilk. This coat was recorded, about 1680, by Lauchlan of that Ilk, alias of Torcastle, with crest—a cat salient proper motto— "Touch not the cat but a glove;" and supporters —two cats 5F
unm.
;
;
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
388,
Alexander of Rothimurchus, 1481, is quarterly, first proper. The seal of and fourth, a lion rampant (?) second and third, six bezants, three, two, and one, on a chief three mullets. Font's blazon is or, a galley, her oars saltireways sable, and in Porteus has the same, dexter chief, a dexter hand holding a heart gules. and also, or, a ship sable flagged gules between a hand and a heart of the ;
—
second. In 1382 Ferchard M'Toshy has to give security to the lord of Badenoch, not to disturb the Bishop of Aberdeen and his tenants soon Malcolm was bailie after Mackintosh appears as Captain of Clanchattan of Lochaber 1447, and after the forfeiture of the Lord of the Isles, Duncan Macintosh, Captain of Clanchattan, had a Crown charter of Moymore and other lands 1476. Lachlan of Dunachton sat in parliament ;
;
1572.
Low. From a birth-brief in favour of Robert, merchant in Cracow, whose paternal ancestors for three generations were merchants in Aberdeen
;
crest
—a
motto
—
laurel leaf within
"
two branches of
Aspera me
The
thistle
disposed orle-
quarters shown
are Miller, j'uvant." The coat is evidently Black, Hardie, Forbes, Turing, Skene, and Leask. founded on that of the old family of Lowis of Menar or Manor, co. Peebles, whose arms as given by Sir David Lindsay, were vert, three laurel leaves argent, but other MSS. have the field argent and the leaves vert. James Lowis of Merchistoun, near Edinburgh, registered arms, crest ^a dexter hand 1672-78 or, three laurel leaves vert holding a " Nos lance in bend proper ; motto ." aspera juvant William, a cadet of the Menar family, served, with the rank of Colonel, under Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, had grants of lands in Livonia, married Sophia Nieroth, and left descendants in that province and in Courland, who were recognized as noble under the designation of Lowis or Loewis of Menar. His pedigree, certified in 1689, shows as
ways
;
—
—
—
;
—
quarters, Carnegie, Tennant, Lindsay, Ogilvie, Murray, Bruce, Leslie, &c. This family bears argent, a fess gules between three stars in chief, and as many leaves in base, a crescent in the nombril point crest a crescent reversed between three stars or, within a pair of wings parted per fess
—
—
;
azure and argent. Patrick de Lowis de Mener witnesses a charter 1439 the barony of Menar was held by his descendants till about the middle of the seventeenth century. Cadets were seated at Glack in the parish of Manor, at Flora, co. Selkirk, and in Peebles, where two of the name were provosts 1638-9 and ;
1650.
Mr
who
acquired Merchistoun, was father of James, who branch intermarried with Hope of Craighall, Cheape registered of Rossie, Trotter of Mortonhall, and from it descended Lowis of Flean
Ninian,
arms
;
this
in Stirlingshire.
Miller of Newton.
A
surname derived from occupation, which
In the reign of Alexander III., an appears in all parts of the country. was held in the Castle of Dumfries on the death of Moleninquest
Adam
dinarius, who, having on a Sunday in the churchyard of St Michael's, called Richard, son of Robert, a thief, a fatal fight ensued, Adam using a of the of which he and Richard a sword. Miller knife, boasted, sharpness
probably did not become a hereditary surname
till
a
much
later period.
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS. James was
depute 1566; Andrew, the well-known IV. David sat in parliament for Annan James James acquired Gourlabank, in East Lothian, by marriage with justice-clerk
printer in the reign of 161 2-2 1.
389
;
Marion, daughter and heir of George Thomson of that place their son, George of Gourlabank, registered arms 1672-78 argent, a cross potent azure placed in a loch proper, in chief two mullets of the second, quartering Thomson. Alexander, last of Gourlabank, was dead in 1758, leaving a sister, Marion, widow of Patrick Begbie, Haddington, and a nephew, Bartholomew Bower, his heirs. Matthew Miller, apothecary in Kilmarnock, acquired Glenlee and other estates, and registered arms, 1672-78 argent, a cross moline azure placed in the base wavy vert, in chief a lozenge between two mullets of the second his descendant. Sir Matthew, baronet. Lord President of the College of Justice, was allowed as supportwo roebucks proper in 1788, and it would appear from the blazon ters that the cross is to be in the centre of the shield and detached from the base wavy. Some of the MSS. have as Gourlabank, others a cross moline between three mullets, azure, for the name of Miller.
—
;
—
;
—
Purin, in the parish of Falkland, co. Fife, the property of Mrs Eliza Aytoun n^e Miller, has descended to her from David Miller of Purin, who died in 1674, and belonged to an old family of burgesses of Kirkcaldy Sir Robert Si bbald calls the proprietor in his time Mr Henry Montgomery alias Miller. The coat here reproduced is from the Funeral Escutcheon of one of the family of Sir George Maxwell of Auldhouse and Pollock. ;
Sinclair of Stevensone. NisBET OF Dean. Alexander Nisbet, author of the "System of Heraldry,'" gives an account of the ancient family seated at Nisbet in Berwickshire, of which he was the last in the main line. They bore a boar passant sable crest argent, three boars' heads erased sable motto "/ bydit.'' Nisbet says that Sir John of Dean, Baronet, bore the arms here reproduced, crest and motto as above, and adds that they have " been in use to carry their arms supported on the right side by a savage wreathed about the head and middle all proper holding a baton on his shoulder, and on the left by a greyhound proper, which are to be seen Further on he cut on the frontispiece of their isle of the West Church." " in use for a time that had been the long by allowance says supporters " a mark of cadency of authority," and that they laid aside the chevron formerly used by the house of Dean, in regard that the family of Dean is the only family of the name in Scotland that has right by consent to
—
;
—
—
;
represent the old original family of the name of Nisbet, seeing that the only lineal male representer (the author of this system) is like to go soon off the world, being an old man, and without issue male or female." It is to be feared that some traffic in armorial rights had taken place between the landless gentleman who did so much for the heraldry of his country and his prosperous cousin, enriched by trade. The arms of Sir Patrick of Dean, baronet, registered 1672-78, have the chevron crest
motto — " Non
;
—
These obest virtuH sorsT an eagle displayed proper; or of the altered supporters Lyon authority by bearings were never a stone on the on are cut the that is true but it supporters granted West Church, with the date 1692. The seal 1598 of Henry, provost of Edinburgh, ancestor of Dean, is a chevron charged with a cinquefoil and between three boars' heads. ;
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
390
Porteus says that in 1645 Dean carried three cinquefoils on the chevron, and Sir William bore this with a hand holding up a castle sable as crest, and the motto ''Hie mihi partus honosy These bearings are cut on a stone at Dean, but it is more modern in style than another which has the arms of Sir William with a chevron uncharged, and those of his Arms of Gavin of Murehouse, cut in stone wife, Katherine Dick. three boars' heads erased with a mullet for at Libberton Church 1631 " motto Veritas vincitT difference " a famous lawyer," carried the chevron charged Sir John of Dirleton, with three cinquefoils, and ensigned with a thistle proper. Nisbet of Craigintinny bore parted per fess argent and vert in chief two boars' heads erased sable, and in base a mullet of the field Porteus' MS. There are at Dean five representations of the family coat with the chevron uncharged Henry Nisbet, Sir P. 1614, Sir William and Williamson his wife and Sir William and Katherine Dick, twice, Janet This surname, taken from land, appears in the twelfth century. his wife. The principal family was seated at Nisbet, in Berwickshire, but there is also a place called Nisbet in Lanarkshire. The lands of Robert, in the latter county, were forfeited during the war of succession; John had part of Dalzell in the reign of David II., which was held by his descendants till the middle of the seventeenth
—
—
;
—
—
—
century.
In 1296 John, Thomas, and William de Nesebyt of Berwickshire, homage to Edward I. Philip Nisbet of that Ilk sat in parliament 1513; Sir Alexander was knighted in 1605; his eldest son Sir Philip was taken prisoner at Philiphaugh, and executed. Another son left an only child, Catherine, who married into the family of Brown of Blackburn, and her son, George Brown, resident at Chirnside, was in 17 19
did
heir of line.
writer to the signet, youngest son of Sir Alexander, was father of the heraldic writer who died in 1725. Sir Alexander survived his
Adam,
was repeatedly a prisoner for debt, and in March 1649, parliament passed an act empowering his creditors to incarcerate him within the Tolbooth of Edinburgh, and eject his family from the place and house eldest son,
of
West
Nisbet.
Arms SO recorded 1672-78 by Alexthen head of the Crawfurd in his History of Renfrew, ander, family. bore without says they they were never supporters blazoning them registered, but a MS. authority gives two bulls sable horned and hoofed or. In the thirteenth century the ancestors of this family were called At a later time Porter, and gave the name of Porterfield to their lands. they took as surname the name they had conferred on the estate. Mr John of that Ilk acquired the barony of Duchal 1544. Alexander of that Ilk, last of the family in the male line, died in 1815, and Sir Michael Shaw-Stewart, Baronet, is heir of line. PoRTERFiELD OF THAT Ilk.
;
Oswald of Fingalton. Backy of Tankerness. Orkney
c.
1680
damnum" no
;
crest
Arms
recorded by James of that place, in " Commodum non proper motto Tankerness was acquired early in the seven-
— a flame of
fire
;
—
supporters. teenth century, and descended to the late Robert Baikie, M.D., who d.s.p. In 1878 his grand-nephew and heir William Dover Cowan assumed the surname of Baikie.
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
391
A branch
possessed Burness for several generations. These arms, which are not recorded for any person of the name, are given in Porteus' M.S. for Macraich they were granted in 1736 to James Macrae of Orangefield, late governor of Fort St George, in the East Indies, a man of obscure This is origin. the only entry for that name.
M'Brair of Netherwood.
;
Andrew M'Brair was 1453-69-72, and
bailie of Dumfries 1384. Robert was provost sat in parliament 1468. Several others of the name were
provosts of the burgh, the last being Archibald, 1581, and five of them sat in parliament, David of Almagill as late as 1648. The family took their designation sometimes from Netherwood, sometimes from Almagill, and in one instance have the style of that Ilk. Archibald Macbrair of that Ilk was beheaded at the market-cross of Edinburgh in January 1587-8 for the slaughter of Archibald Newall, burgess of Dumfries on ist April 1587. Almagill was the property of William, In 1504 Sir John, chaplain, was killed in Dumfries by Robert c. 1500. Grierson. John, formerly canon of Glenluce, was confined in Hamilton Castle as a heretic by the Regent, made his escape in 1550, went to England, was vicar of St Nicholas, Newcastle, and died there 1584. The Macbrairs suffered during the civil war, also from family quarrels, and from becoming cautioners for their kinsmen, the Earl of Annandale and Sir Robert Murray of Cockpool. Alexander of Netherwood married Susan, sister and heir of Thomas Rome of Clouden, and died in January 1738, leaving a son Robert, who sold the estates and d.s.p., and Agnes, who was served heir of her mother 1787. She inherited the estates of Chapel and Quarter, married Benjamin Dodd, and died 23d October 1796, when these properties passed to her son, Brigade-Major James Dodd, who sold them.
Dick of Prestonfield.
Arms
registered 1687 by Sir James, In 1771 Sir Alexander, paternally Cuninghame, and a younger baronet. allowed was son, supporters, two white horses at liberty maned and hoofed which or, the right to gave rise to a heraldic cause celbbre 1849, between the heir of line and of entail, Thomas Smith Cuninghame of Caprington, and the heir-male. Sir Robert Keith Dick Cunyngham of Prestonfield,
baronet, which is reported in Seton's Law and Practice of Heraldry. The Court of Session, founding on a private Act of Parliament, decided in favour of the former, but the Lyon Court granted supporters, two horses at liberty sable to Sir William Hanmer Dick Cunyngham of Prestonfield and Lamburghtoun, baronet, who had succeeded his father pendente lite.
1874, a paper on the Sir William Dick of Braid, knight, pretensions of his descendants to a baronetcy. See W. for another coat. Balfour and Porteus have gules, a hart's head or, on a chief argent Sir William of Braid bore argent, a fess azure between three roses gules. two stars in chief, and a crescent in base gules.
The
writer contributed to the
Herald and Genealogist
and
Pringle of Gallasheils. Burnet of Barns. Boyle of Kelburn. In some
—
authorities the field is argent and In 1296 virtutis prcemium" as motto. and Richard de Boyuile of the county
Honor the horns fessways William Boule, Robert de Boyuille of Ayr, did homage to Edward I., also Eustace of Richard's lands are mentioned in a charter of Robert I. ''
5c
Dumfriesshire.
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
392
William Boyll, in 1362, was collector of contributions from the deaneries of Elgin and Strathbogie, and in 1367 William Boyuil, clerk of the diocese of Glasgow, probably the same person, is a witness to a transIn 1656 Roger Boyle, Lord Broghill, son of action in Elgin Cathedral. the great Earl of Cork, was deputy from Edinburgh to the parliament at Westminster, and James, Duke of Queensberry, Lord High Commissioner in Scotland and Secretary of State, married Mary Boyle, sister of the At this time David Boyle of Kelburne, head of an old Earl of Cork. Ayrshire family, sat in parliament for the county of Bute, and was promoted, through the influence it is said of the Duchess, his namesake but not kinswoman, to several high offices, and created Lord Boyle 1699, and Earl of Glasgow 1703. He then adopted a quartered coat first and fourth or, an eagle displayed with two heads gules, being an augmentation ( ? founded on the English coat of De Boyvill azure, an eagle displayed with two heads or) second and third, the arms of Boyle, Earl of Cork; the paternal coat in an ;
;
;
—
escutcheon of pretence crest the eagle parted per pale embattled argent " Dominus providebitT His supporters were a savage and gules motto which may be considered Scotch, and a lion as borne by the Cork ;
—
;
family.
FoRRET OF FiNGASK.
an old baronial family in Arms on the Fife, whose representative John sat in parliament 1560. monument at Bruges of Sir William, who died 6th July 1600 or, a chevron gules and in chief a boar's head couped sable quartering, argent, crest a greyhound s head affront^e six billets three two and one sable the shield is encircled with the collar of an order of knighthood, and the inscription calls Sir William knight of the order of St Andrew in Scotland (?). Alexander Forratt, captain in the service of the King of Sweden, Forrct of that
Ilk,
;
—
;
;
;
during the Thirty Years' War, was recognized as noble in Sweden 1650, descendants. Thomas Forret, vicar of Dollar, of the family of was burnt at Edinburgh as a heretic, February 1538-9. Glass of Petintian. This with the addition of a bordure gules was registered 1672-78 by Alexander Glass of Sauchie, co. Stirling. George Rothesay, herald, 1724-41, had the bordure engrailed, and for crest, a drinking ^/«55 standing upright filled with wine. In 181 2 John Glas, surgeon at Baughulpoor, in the East Indies, matriculated the coat of Sauchie quartering Stirling, and was granted supporters as chief of his name two horses argent saddled and bridled he died in 1822. Pettintian in proper housings gules fringed or Strathearn was for several generations the property of the family. Mr William was treasurer to the Bishop of Dunkeld 1584; John sat in parliament for Perth 1681-86. The arms reproduced are one of the quarters of a descendant of Sir William Stewart of Grandtully 1610-46. Glass of Ascog in Bute existed as one of the families locally called barons from the fifteenth century till recently. Archibald was sheriffdepute of the county 1685. From a younger son of Pittentian descended the Rev. John, who, about 1730, founded the sect of the Glassites.
and
left
that Ilk,
—
;
GiLMOUR OF Craigmiller. See under Gilbert. Trotter of Mortonhall. See W. Chancellor of Shieldhill. The lion is gules arms
in
the entry of
1704 of John, late bailie of Edinburgh, afterwards of Shieldhill, as heir of elder brother James. As all authorities make the lion sable, in
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
393
the blazon ought probably to have been "sable armed and langued gules." The Chancellors held Shieldhill and other lands as vassals of the Lords Somerville before 1432. In 1707 the superiority was acquired by John, above named, who died in 1731, and his funeral entry gives eight quarters, Hamilton of Raploch, Symington of that Ilk, Dishington of Ardross on the father's side, and Lockhart of Lee, Auchinleck of Balmanno, Hamilton of Dalserf, and Strachan of Thornton on the mother's.
Brisbane of Bishopton. Bishopton
;
crest
nowed proper "
;
—a
Arms registered 1672-78 by James of stork's head erased holding in her beak a serpent "
motto
—
Certamine summo."
Note by a
later
hand
—
This motto is now changed to Dabit otia DeusT In 1 8 16 supporters, two talbots proper, were granted to MajorGeneral Sir Thomas Brisbane of Brisbane, K.C.B., and the old motto was resumed. Seal of Thomas Byrsbane, 1422, a chevron (? checquy) between two cushions pendant by the corners in chief, and a garb in base crest a In another funeral escutcheon the arms of Brisbane of Rossland garb. are given with the cushions lozenge-ways. The crests registered about 1672 by two cadets are curious John, Judge Advocate to His Majesty's Navy, has a serpent wreathed about an anchor in pale proper Matthew, M.D., a hillock semde of ants proper, with " the motto Virtuti damnosa quiesT Mr William Brisebain acted as chancellor to Edward Baliol, when, in a parliament held at Edinburgh in February 1334, he surrendered a great part of the south of Scotland to Edward of England tunc ut dicebatur cancellario, is the description given of him. Thomas Brisbane had a charter of Little Rothy, co. Aberdeen, from Robert I. Thomas, and Alexander, his brother, witnessed a charter of Thomas, Earl of Mar, before 1365. "In 1402 a charter of Isobel, Countess of " Mar, was witnessed by her cOusin Thomas Brisbane. Thomas Brisbane of Laithers, 1417; William Brisbane left a son Alan, called Brisbane, who had a charter of the lands of Mucherach and Holmedalmartyne from Donald, Earl of Lennox, 1333-64, on the resignation of Adam de Glachfrith Alan Brysban, c. 1390; nth August 1423, Sir William Graham " "
—
;
:
—
;
;
;
cousin John granted the lands of Ballenclerache, co. Stirling, to his Brisbane and the heirs of his body, whom failing, to the heirs-male of the body of his sister Janet, spouse of James de Schaw. Ballenclerache remained with his heirs till it was sold by John of
Bishopton in 1652. The family long took their designation from Bishopton, which they held of the Lords Erskine, Earls of Mar, from the commencement of the In fifteenth century, and had also lands in the parish of Largs, co. Ayr. into estates his Ayrshire 1631 John of Bishopton had a charter erecting
the barony of Gogosyde. His son, John of Bishopton, represented the shire of Renfrew in parliament 1645-50. The printed pedigree does not seem accurate Captain William, who was served heir of his father John of Bishopton in September 1647, is omitted, and a succession of three lairds all named John is given. This is' not in agreement with the entry of the testament of John, brother of the laird, who died at Bishopton in April 1647. John of Bishopton settled his estates on his daughter Elizabeth, who ;
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
394
was not the heiress of the family, on her marriage, in 1657 to her cousin James Shaw, who thereupon assumed the surname of Brisbane, and the designation of fiar of Bishopton. He alienated the fee of that and acquired Kelsoland, afterwards called Brisbanetown or Brisproperty,
As late as 1770 the head of the family, as superior of Bishopton, that took designation, but his successor was called Brisbane of Brisbane, Dane.
A
younger branch possessed Middle Walkinshaw, and ended in who entailed it on Robert, fourth son of James of Bishopton,
William,
and died before 1686.
The Brisbanes of Selviland ended in 1706, on the death of Alexander of that place, leaving two sisters. John, Secretary of the Navy in England, married Margaret, Baroness Napier, and left issue, from whom Lord Napier. Tod. From the Funeral Escutcheon of the Stair family; the maternal grandmother of Margaret Ross, Lady Stair, was named Tod. Thomas Tod, burgess of Berwick, swore fealty to Edward L in 1291. In 1330 a payment was made to Mr John Tod, to enable him to redeem Soon after Nicholas, his books, which had been taken by the English. son of John Tod, was a hostage in England. Several other persons of the name were connected with Berwick or Berwickshire later, one of them giving an annual rent for the maintenance of the bridge over the Tweed. Thomas dictus Todde was canon of Glasgow, and rector of Old Roxburgh in the reign of David IL Robert sat in parliament 1479, and Thomas in 1485. Alexander was king's coiner 1451 ; Thomas, burgess of Edinburgh, was knighted in 1490; was provost of Edinburgh 1488-91-98; was proentered into a treasonable agreement prietor of Sheriffhall in April 1491 with the King of England, but soon after was at the head of the mint he was dead in February 1505, when mass was said for his soul. Archibald ;
;
was provost of Edinburgh 1646-7 and
1652-3, and died in 1656. the Funeral Escutcheon of Charles Congalton of that Ilk, 1742, whose mother was Jean, daughter of John Ireland of Milnhorn, co. Perth, by the sister of Sir Robert Hepburn of Keith. His elder brother, Robert (Congalton) Hepburn of Keith, was ancestor of the Milnhorn belonged to John family of Riccart-Hepburn of Rickarton. Ireland 1649. In 1296 Robert Dirlaund of the county of Stirling, and Thomas Dirland of Roxburghshire, swore fealty to Edward I. Duncan, Earl of Fife, 20th Jan. 1336, granted a charter of the barony of Murthly, co. Perth, to John de Yrelande as held by his ancestors. The Irelands, often called de Hibernia, held Murthly till about 1440, when it was alienated to
Ireland.
From
Thomas Abercromby. Burnbane in Murthly was possessed by Robert de Ireland, who was dead 1419, when his son and heir John had a charter from Thomas Abercromby of that Ilk, in which he is designed cousin of the granter. His descendant Thomas sold Burnbane to Sir Thomas Stewart in 1664. Thomas was bailie of Stirling 1365; Thomas was rector of Weem 1465 John sat in Parliament 1483-4 Mr John was Archdeacon of St Andrews, and envoy to England 1483 Walter, provost of Perth 1494 David was deputy marischal, and sat in parliament 1534-40. There were Irelands of Parkhead in Scone during the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. John was vicar of Perth 1524. ;
;
;
;
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
395
Ireland of Baldastard, co. Fife, of whom John died in 1659, and his daughter and heir Barbara married in 1660 John Lundin, nephew of Lundin of that Ilk. In Roxburghshire the family held lands in the barony of Wilton, which were sold in 1454 by John de Irelandys de eodem to David Scott of Kirkurd. From this line probably descended the Irelands of Fardingwell, Knabany, Caldow, &c. At the very time when the Murthly family were selling their property, a cadet who founded a branch holding a good position in Poitou, obtained a birth brief showing his gentle descent 28th June 1664. Their genealogy has been printed, and M, Francisque Michel describes the arms they bear:
second, Scotland and Drummond impaled third, Murray; fourth, Mercer, and over all in an escutcheon of pretence the paternal coat, argent, two bars gules in chief three mullets azure. Speir. Arms of "Sir John, provost of Edinburgh" (?) from the Funeral Escutcheon of Charles, Earl of Hopetoun, 1742. The provost's daughter married Robert Foulis of Leadhills, and had an heiress who married James Hope of Hopetoun in 1638. In 1643 " Dame Rachell Speir, Lady Curriehill," married Sir John Hope of Craighall. She was daughter and co-heir of Thomas, a merchant burgess of Edinburgh, where several of the surname had been magistrates early in the seventeenth century. There were about that time small landowners in Renfrewshire: Archibald Spiers, merchant in Glasgow, having acquired Elderslie and other estates in that county, had a grant of arms 1767 azure, a ship in full sail argent her ensigns flying gules between three bezants crest, a dexter arm vambraced holding a spear in bend proper. In 1859 a different coat with the same crest was granted to Robert Thomas Napier Speir of Burnbrae, co. Renfrew, and of Culdees, co. Perth, viz., azure, two tilting spears in saltire between four boars' heads couped or, on a chief argent a mullet between two crescents gules. Mackay of Bighouse. The only notice in the MSS. of the coat of the Mackay family before the time of the first Lord Reay is given by Sir " J. Balfour Mackay of Strathnauerne, 1503, arg. over three mullets quarterly,
Abercromby
first,
;
;
—
;
—
azure a hand naked prop." Pont gives for Mackie paly of six or and gules on a bend sinister azure a crescent argent between two spur rowels or. This nearly resembles the coat given from W. for Makduf. Can this have been the bearing of Angus Dow Mackay of Strathnaver, the powerful chief of the clan in the early part of the fifteenth century, who was arrested at Inverness 1427, and is called by Fordun "Angus
—
Duff", alias
Macqye." John Mackay, Esq., Meadowbank House, Fortrose, has furnished me with a drawing of the arms on a stone at Tongue House three boars' heads couped one and two, in base a dexter hand couped fessways holding
—
a dagger erect
motto—
"
;
crest
— a roebuck's head, the neck pierced with an D. M.
arrow no date. R.; ;
supporters, two bears; initials, describes a flag of knitted silk said to have belonged to a or John Mackay (Abrach) in the "fifteenth century. It has on it stag valiant. be treun" roebuck, and the Gaelic words Bidh Douglas of Mains. Nicholas, first of this family, was son of Sir of John Douglas, who was assassinated 1350, and brother of Sir James male without in died issue, Dalkeith and Aberdour. John of Mains 1705
Manuforli;"
Mr Mackay
5H
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS,
396
Marie having married into the family of Campbell of Blythswood, her second son James inherited Mains, and took the surname and arms of the family of his mother. His daughter Margaret, Duchess of Douglas, left her property to purchase lands to be called Douglas-Support, which were to be entailed so as to found a separate branch of the family under the singular condi" the surname of Douglas, tion that the heirs succeeding should assume and carry the arms of Douglas and Mains with the addition of a woman trampling a snake under her feet, and supporting a child in her arms crowned with laurels." This received the sanction of the Lyon King of Arms. The child represents Lady Jane Douglas's son, whose claim to The snake, it the Douglas estates was warmly supported by her Grace. Duke of but the emblem is to not the meant is to be hoped, be, Hamilton, The present holder of the entailed estate is the Rev. Sholto of falsehood.
and
his daughter
Douglas Campbell-Douglas of Douglas-Support, formerly Rosehall, co. Lanark, younger brother of Archibald Campbell Campbell of Blythswood, and cousin of Archibald Campbell Douglas of Mains, co. Dumbarton. Bannerman of Elsick. Arms registered 1672-78 by Alexander of In 1692 supporters, two armed men proper, were granted to him, Elsick. then Sir Alexander, baronet. Balfour Seal of John of Elsick, 1446 three bears' heads erased. gives for Elsick or, on a fess between three boars' heads couped azure as many mascles gules; also for Bannerman of Watertoun in Buchan, 1590, azure, a fess argent charged with three lozenges of the first between three boars' heads erased (azure ?). Porteus's blazon for Watertoun varies again argent, on a fess between three heads couped gules a mascle. Pont also has varying blazons, but none of the MSS. gives the modern coat with the banner. Donald Bannerman, physician to David H. had a crown charter of Watertoun and Weltoun 1366. He is perhaps the person who held the thanage of Aberdeen, which was resumed by the Crown 1367. Alexander of Watertoun was Sheriff-depute of Aberdeen, c. 1500. Alexander of
—
—
—
Watertoun
Alexander sold Watertoun 161 1. Alexander, burgess of Aberdeen, had a charter 1387 from Sir Alexander Eraser of Cowie of the lands of Elsick, in the barony of Cowie, which continued the seat of the family for three hundred and seventy years. RocHEAD OF Innerleith. Arms registered c. 1672 by John of Craigleith, near Edinburgh, who died soon after, leaving an only child She married William Morison of PrestonJanet, heiress of Craigleith. and died in grange, 17 12, leaving issue. sat in parliament 1572
;
Her uncle, James of Innerleith, advocate, town-clerk of Edinburgh, was knighted, married 1661 Magdalene, daughter of Sir Francis Kinloch, baronet, of Gilmerton, and died November 1692, leaving 1. Sir James, created a baronet 4th June 1704, d.s.p. ist May 1737. 2. Janet, married first, Alexander Murray of Melgund secondly. Sir David Dalrymple of Hailes, baronet. The descendants of her second differenced their marriage piternal coat by the addition of a bordure azure charged with boars' heads erased and mullets argent for Rochead.
—
;
Her third son, Mary, married Sir Francis Kinloch, baronet. on as his aunt heir of entail to Alexander, Elizabeth, assumed succeeding the surname of Rochead, and was ancestor of the present Charles Rochead of Innerleith and Hawkslaw. 3.
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS. Elizabeth of — arms 1745
397
Innerleith registered c. argent, a fess in chief and two mullets in base azure. She died unm. 9th December 1753. 5. Magdalene married James Cathcart of Carbiston, and left issue ; her only son, Colonel James, assumed the surname of Rochead, but d.s.p. 14th April 1753. Thomas, a merchant in Dunse, was father of James, merchant burgess of Edinburgh, treasurer, bailie, and dean of guild, who and Innerleith and left them to his two acquired Craigleith 1646, 1649, 4.
between a boar's head erased
sons above named.
Another family possessed Whitsomehill, co. Berwick, and in 1673 Thomas, of that place, registered arms allusive to the name argent, a savage's head erased distilling drops of blood proper between three combs azure; crest a savage's arm erect and erased proper; motto "-Propatria." The crest of Craigleith and Innerleith families is a savage's head " Fide et virtute.'" couped proper motto Pont gives two blazons for the name Rough, and in both there are
—
—
;
boars' heads
—
—
—
—argent,
a bend, or bar, gules between three boars' heads chartulary of Newbottle as is witness to a charter. Gibson of Durie. Seal of "William, Dean of Restalrig 1540, quarterly first, a ship; second, a tree; third, blank; fourth, a cinquefoil. The printed genealogies of the Gibson family, which are very incorrect, state that this churchman having been sent on a mission to Rome, obtained from the Pope a grant of three keys as arms, with the motto " Coslestes pandite portce" which the family have retained ever since. erased sable. early as 1295,
The surname is found in the when Philippus dictus Rocchet
—
—
The keys make their first appearance on the seal of David Gibsone, canon of Glasgow 1557 ; first and fourth, two keys in saltire, which is the bearing of the papal see, whereas the later Gibson coat is three keys fessways in pale second, gyromy of eight third, a saltire. The pedigree gives three generations of Gibsons barons of Goldingstones in Fife Goldingstones was not a barony, and in 1579 these lands were in the possession of Janet Gibson and James Adamson, so that family must have ended in an heiress. The founder of the distinction of the family was Sir Alexander Gibson, a lawyer, who was knighted in 1633, was Lord President of the Court of Session 1642; acqufred the barony of Durie, co. Fife, 1614, and In 1633, Sir James other extensive estates, and died at Durie 1644. three him as arms confirmed to Balfour, Lyon, keys barways ^gules, Sir James gives in his MS. another Gibson coat, with the date argent. 1590 argent, three keys azure; there is in Mr Laing's collection, a seal of David Gibson, vicar of Colmonell 1552 a fess between three fleurs-dePorteus in 1660, gives Gibson of Durie lis in chief and a chalice in base. three keys or. ^gules, a chevron argent between Sir Alexander Gibson, second of Durie, was knighted 1641, and of the College appointed Lord Clerk Register was" afterwards a Senator of Justice, married Cecilia, daughter of Thomas Fotheringham of Powrie, and died in June 1656. His eldest son, Sir Alexander, a Privy Councillor 1661, married died without 1 65 1, Marjory, daughter of Andrew, Lord Balvaird, and male issue 1661, being succeeded by his brother John Gibson of Durie. arms 1672-78 gules, three keys barways or crest— He ;
;
;
—
—
—
—
;
motto —
registered
a pelican proper
;
—
"
Pandite
;
ccelestes portce."
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS.
398
John was succeeded by his son Alexander Gibson of Durie, who died Edinburgh 1699. The next branch of the family descended from Sir John of Pentland and Addiston in Midlothian, second son of the Lord President. He bore the arms as registered 1672-78 with a bordure vair for difference, and married, first, Jean, daughter and co-heir of Mr Alexander Hay of Kennet, Sir John, his grandson, was deputy clerk register, and CO. Clackmannan. He died in 1704, and was succeeded by his son, inherited Durie in 1699. of Gibson Alexander Pentland, who inherited a baronetcy of Scotland on On 31st December 1702 Thomas, the death of his grand-uncle Sir John. son of Sir John, first of Pentland, by his third wife Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Thomas Thomson of Duddingstone, baronet, was created a baronet He acquired King's with remainder to his heirs-male whomsoever. Cramond and Keirhill, married Jean, daughter of Edward Marjoribanks of Halyards, and was succeeded by his son Sir Edward, second baronet He died of Keirhill, and of Kinnaird in Fife, cornet in the Scots Greys. in May 1727, leaving an only child, Janet, who married Captain James Bruce, 26th Regiment of Foot, and died in 1776 leaving issue. The title passed to Sir Edward's uncle, Sir John, third baronet, colonel of a regiment of foot, and Governor of Portsmouth, who left daughters, of whom Susan died in London 1758, and another married Major Thomas Dalziel. Sir Alexander of Pentland, fourth baronet, was succeeded by his nephews Sir John, fifth, and Sir Robert, sixth baronets, the former of whom left a daughter, Helen Gibsone of Pentland, who registered arms as 1672Her son is 78, with supporters two angels with wings expanded proper. s.p. in
the present proprietor of Pentland. The baronetcy, on the death of Sir Robert, devolved on John GibsonCarmichael of Skirling, co. Peebles, who had sold Durie 1786, and having succeeded to Skirling and other estates on the death of his grand-uncle John, Earl of Hyndford in 1787, registered arms 1791, first and fourth, Gibson In 1823 his brother and second, Carmichael third, Craig. heir-male Sir Thomas Gibson-Carmichael, baronet, also recorded arms, ;
;
second and third, Gibson first, Carmichael fourth, Craig, and was allowed the supporters two angels with wings expanded proper. His son is the present baronet. The Gibson-Craigs of Riccarton, co. Edinburgh, descend from William Gibson, uncle of Sir John Gibsonbaronets, Carmichael above mentioned. Archibald, a younger son of the family, settled as a merchant at Dantzic, where he was British consul, had certificates of his descent from a family of good birth in Scotland 1763 and 1777, and in the latter year was recognised as noble in Prussia with the title of Baron. He bore the arms within a bordure or, and for supporters two angels proper vested azure holding in their hands palm branches ;
;
vert.
Alexander, son of a younger son of Sir Alexander, second of Pentland, having inherited the estate of his mother's family, registered arms 1773 as Alexander Gibson-Wright of Cliftonhall and Kersie, when the three keys of Gibson in a field azure were quartered with Wright, and these arms were again recorded by his great-grandson the late Sir Alexander Charles Ramsay-Gibson Maitland, baronet, in 1866, quartered with Maitland and Ramsay of Barnton. It has been said that Sir Alexander was created a baronet in 1628,
FUNERAL ESCUTCHEONS. and his name appears grant of land in Gibson of Durie,
in Sir
William Alexander's
list
399
as having had a
Nova Scotia, but the creation never took effect. John who registered arms 1672-78, his son Alexander of Durie,
and Alexander Gibson of Pentland, 1704, break the long line of knights who have represented the family. The earliest mention of the name I have met with is in the will 1390 of Sir James Douglas of Dalkeith, who leaves a legacy of _;^io to John In Stacie's Heraldic MS. the following arms are given to John Gibson. Gibsone of Trackdoneck, late secretary to His Grace the Duke of Queensberry, and now present clerk and master gunner to the artillery of this
— kingdom gules, three keys in pale counterchanged
;
5
«
'\
-
\
j
|
1
'
;
;
within a bordure crest a sword and
or,
argent charged with hearts and cannon balls proper " Tarn pace quam bello." pen saltireways proper; motto
—
\
—
\
XIV.
SUNDRIES
An
illuminated Heraldic Manuscript, the property of Charles Maule Kerr, Esq., Edinburgh, which he has most obligingly lent me, has furnished eight coats. This volume has been long in the possession of Mr Kerr's family, and the authorship and history of it are unknown. It is a small quarto, and resembles W. in style and contents, although there are many differences. There are the arms of Prester John, Julius Csesar, Alexander the Great, &c. arms of some continental sovereigns impaled arms of the of Scotland and their the last Kings consorts, being James V. and Mary of Guise arms of the peers of Scotland. Lastly, the arms, arranged in alphabetical order, and four on each sheet, of five hundred and fourteen of the minor barons and gentry of Scotland. The collection probably belongs to the middle of the sixteenth few notes follow of variations century, with additions made afterwards. ;
;
;
A
which seem worth noticing. Lord Crichton of Sanquhar has, in an escutcheon of pretence, Erskine of KinnouU, a pale within a bordure sable. Lord Cathcart. Crest a hand holding a garland proper, within
—
it
a crescent
or.
Macleod.
The
a man's head with long tufts of hair standing out stiffly, between two banners bendways. Baird. Vert, on a fess argent a bird's head erased sable, in base a boar or. DoBiE. The bridge is level and the parapet wall embattled, in the water three fish and a duck are swimming. Sir fraise between three bears' heads. Forbes of Pitsligo. Robert Forman, Lyon, granted at the request of Mr Duncan Forbes of Monymusk, a certificate of arms, 3rd June 1561, to Katherine, daughter of the deceased William Forbes, who resided at Elsinore in Denmark, and was a cadet of Pitsligo azure, a fraise between three bears' heads argent muzzled sable. Grierson of Lag. Gules, on a fess argent a crescent of the field, in base a lock of a peculiar shape, wider below than above, the sides curve inwards, three keyholes, and a border round the whole of the lock. Hamilton of Fingalton. Bordure compony ermine and azure. crest is
A
—
Hunter.
Argent, three bugles vert, stringed gules.
Hervie. Gules, a fess argent fretty sable, between three cinqiiefoils Another coat is, Harly or in chief and a raascle in base of the second. Harvy (?), a bend cottised between two trefoils slipped. Kinneir of that Ilk. Sable, on a bend or three eagles displayed sable armed gules. Lockhart of Lee. Azure, three boars' heads erased within a bor.
dure engrailed
Sable, a garland with an open cup resting on the upper argent.
LowRY. part of
it
or.
SUNDRIES.
404
Argent, a fess gules, a bordure gyronny of
Melville of Carnbee. eight azure and or.
Mackenzie of Kintail.
Argent, a stag's head cabossed, between
the attires a hand couped gules.
Napier of Merchistoun.
First and fourth, argent, a saltire engrailed second and third, an indistinct representation between four roses gules of the arms of Lennox; the four roses gules are plain, but the saltire is gone, or perhaps the painting was left unfinished. This tends to confirm the late Mr Mark Napier's theory, that the family had quartered Lennox, and that the vacant quarters in Sir David Lindsay's representation of the coat were to be Lennox. Plummer. Uncoloured, paly of three, three lions' heads erased, on a chief three birds. In 1698 Andrew of Middlestead, co. Selkirk, said to be of English descent, had a patent of arms azure, on a chevron between three lions' heads erased or guttd de sang as many martlets of the field. From him descends the family of Scott-Plummer of Middlestead and Sunderland Hall, who also represent the Kerrs of Yair, hereditary coroners of the county of Selkirk, and quarter their arms viz., gules, on a chevron argent three mullets of the first, in base a stag's head erased or gutt6 de sang. These arms were confirmed to William Karr of Sunderland Hall, as representer of the Yair family, c. 1694, to correct an erroneous entry made 1672-78, in which he is said to be a cadet of Fernihirst, has a bordure invecked argent and the stag's head or. William Kerr of Yair, living in i486, the first of the family, could hardly be a cadet of Fernihirst, as he was a cotemporary of the first of that branch, Thomas of The arms are cut Fernihirst, 1474, younger son of Andrew of Cessford. on a stone in Melrose Abbey with no bordure. The Plummers may be of English descent, but the name is met with in Scotland in the middle of the fourteenth century. The Plomers of Radwell, in Herts, bore a chevron charged with gouttes de sang between three lions' heads erased. Scougal of Whytekirk, as G. Sachy of that Ilk. The coat given for Shank. Tyry of Lunan. Sable, a chevron argent between three plates, charged with a cross between the letters J. and S. *AiKMAN. Arms registered 1672-78 by John of Cairnie argent, a sinister hand holding an oaken baton paleways proper surmounted by a bend engrailed gules crest an oak tree proper motto " Sub robore virtus. In 1296 Alisaendre Akeman of Lanarkshire swore fealty to Edward I. John Hekman, bailie of Montrose, 1400 James, Dingwall pursuivant, 1460-88. James sat in parliament 1473, and he or a namesake sat again in 1505. John held land in Loreburn, near Arbroath, 1505. of John Cairnie, above named, was son of Mr George, bailie of the regality of Arbroath. His son William, sheriff-depute of Forfarshire, was father of William, the painter, who died in 1731. His eldest daughter was mother of John Forbes, who assumed the surname of Aikman on succeeding to the entailed estate of Broomelton, co. Lanark, on the death of his ;
—
—
;
;
—
—
;
;
cousin William Aikman. •Barry. coat founded on this was granted 1813-25 to members of a family of Barr, then resident in England, but of Scotch descent the of Barr of Treehorn, co. Ayr, bore a different coat not registered. family In 1812 Pendock Barry of Tollerton Hall, co. Notts, obtained from the
A
;
SUNDRIES.
40s
Lyon King of Arms a grant of arms and supporters as descended in the male line from a Scotch family, and in the female line from David, Earl of Huntingdon, brother of William the Lion—gules, three bars embattled argent supporters, two lions gardant argent, each gorged with a collar counter embattled gules, chained or, holding in his fore paws a banner of the arms. The surname is probably taken from Barry in Forfarshire. In 1360 William de Barry was a collector of contributions in Gowrie. Thomas Barry, 1391, and Henry, rector of CoUace, 1466, had English safe-conducts 1526 Andrew Barrie sat in parliament. Robert Bar had a of land in Nova Scotia from Sir William Alexander, 29th September grant 1628, with the intention of his being created a baronet. In 1570 Thomas Barrye, unicorn pursuivant, had his right hand cut off and was banished for forging the regent's signature. ;
;
*Carnegie of Kinnaird. *Cramond. The seals of James of that Ilk, 1522, Robert of Auldbar, 1570, and James of Auldbar, 1575, all have three pelicans on a bend. Captain William registered arms 1704 azure, on a bend or three pelicans He was son of a younger son proper, a bordure embattled of the second. of Hercules Cramond of Balhall, son of the last laird of Auldbar. Robert Cramond, clerk of the Bills, son of Patrick of Balhall, had two sons who died unmarried, and three daughters Elizabeth, married James Edmonston of Longfauch Margaret, married John Forbes, W.S. and Anne married in 1742 John Boswell, President of the Royal College of PhysiHer son, cians, Edinburgh, a younger son of Boswell of Auchinleck. Robert Boswell, was Lyon-depute 1770-96, and acted as interim Lyon King of Arms 1795-96. In 1773 he registered arms quartering Cramond as a coheir of the
—
;
;
;
—
bend between three pelicans in their nests feeding their young argent he had the rare addition of a compartment below the shield, a lion's head affront6e gules suppressing a saltire argent, allusive to his office. The surname is taken from Cramond, near Edinburgh, where the family held lands from the beginning of the thirteenth centur>' till 1541. Auldbar and Melgund in Forfarshire long belonged to them, and the former was not sold till 1577. In 1296 Laurence de Cramund, of the county of Forfar, and William of the county of Edinburgh, clerk, swore fealty to Edward I. Lands, are restored to Johannes le Buteler de Caramund and Mr William de Cramunde, in the county of Edinburgh, and Mr William, parson of Wynchdurris. In 1291 John de Cramund was escheator of Alexander de Baliol, Chaman auditor in place of berlain of Scotland 1289, Mr William, clerk, was
Auldbar family, but altering the coat
azure, a
;
;
the chamberlain.
*Crukschank. Three entries of this name in the Lyon Register on this the field 1672-78, and three at later periods, show coats founded :
sometimes or, sometimes argent. This surname is mostly met with in Aberdeen and Kincardineshires, where there were Cruikshanks of Tiilymorgan, Warthill, Berrihill, Elrick, &c.
of Urchy makes a foundation at Rathven to in 1454 is pray for the soul of the late Christina Crukschank William,
In 1334
Thomas Hay
;
designed scutifer. r t had a charter of Little John and Alexander Cruksank, brothers, Warthill 1482. •
1
SUNDRIES.
4o6
*Drummond of Concraig.
This curious variation of the family
arms does not appear in the Lyon Register till 1788, when it was recorded with a difference by John of Megginch. Three years later the heir-male of the Concraig family, James, then a merchant in London, recorded per fess wavy or and gules, and was allowed supporters, a savage In 1846 this was confirmed Sarted olding a club and a knight with a spear. of as Drummond the heir-male of this family. Colonel to John Boyce
—
*MuDY. See W. *ScRYMGEOUR OF Myres.
Registered,
1672-78,
Mr
by
David
Scrimzeor of Bowhill.
*TuLLYDAFF. The arms of this old family, which took its surname from the barony of Tullydaff in Aberdeenshire, have not been registered. The animal, which here resembles a rabbit, is described by Porteus and other heralds as a hind couchant. John de Tullydaff died in or before 1398, leaving a son William, who was killed at the battle of Harlaw. Andrew of that Ilk was dead in 1558, leaving three coheirs, who married Stevin, Seton of Disblair, and Knowis. Elizabeth Tullydaff, heiress of Mostoun, married John Bannerman, and left a son, John Bannerman of Mostoun, 1665. There were Tullydaffs of Raniston for four generations.
Mr
William was principal of St Leonard's College, St Andrews, 1691-95 and his grandson, Mr Thomas, Principal of the United College and Chaplain to the King, died in 1777. Walter Tullidelph, physician in Antigua, purchased the estate of Bank in Forfarshire, which he called Tullidelph Hall his elder daughter and heir, Charlotte, married Sir John Ogilvy of Inverquharity, Bart. ;
;
My
friend,
Mr
Stephen Tucker, Somerset Herald, has, with his
usual untiring kindness, supplied me with complete lists of the names contained in two Scottish Armorial Manuscripts belonging to the College of Arms, and copies of all the coats that have not already been included in this collection.
One manuscript, by Hector le Breton a French herald, compiled in the reign of James VI., before 1603, afforded no additions. The other belongs to the same reign, but has no author's name, and from it the fifteen coats which follow are taken. Gemell. This is given by Porteus and Pont Stacie has Gemiell of Glasgow argent, on a bend sable three goats' head erased of the first. In a Funeral Escutcheon are given the arms of Eupheme, wife of Sir Thomas Wallace of Craigie, baronet, daughter of William Gemmell of Stacie gives this Templehouse, Ayrshire or, three bars gemels gules with the field argent. Templehouse is still the property of the family, who have been seated there since about the middle of the sixteenth cenMr Robert Gamyll was prebendary of Maybole 1501. tury.
—
;
—
;
Law.
Lawmount of that Ilk. Arms registered, 1672-78, by Lawmond of that Ilk azure, a lion rampant argent crest "
—
hand couped
at the wrist proper
;
motto
—
;
Ne
—Archibald a dexter
parcas nee spernas.
SUNDRIES.
407
Although the charge a lion rampant is the same, the tinctures have been Pont has ermine, a lion rampant azure Porteus, repeatedly changed a lion argent, rampant azure armed gules there is another coat allusive to the name given by Pont and other authorities azure, a mound or ;
;
;
globe, with cross
On
this
—
or.
was founded
the bearing of the Perthshire family of said to be descended in the male azure, a mound or crossed gules between two bourden
Burden of Auchingarrich and Feddal, line
—
from Lamont
staves (or battle-axes) proper. The writer contributed to the " Genealogist " a notice of the pedigree and arms of the Burdens, whose heir-general, in 1878, sold the estates held by his ancestors for upwards of three hundred years. The heads of the families of Lamont and Burden both carried as supporters two savages, but this has not been sanctioned in either case. Lauman or Lagman, son of Malcolm, son of Ferchar, made a grant to the Monastery of Paisley, ante 1246, which was confirmed in 1295 by his son Malcolm, son of Lauman, sometimes called Malmory Maklaweman. In 1472 John Lawmond had a crown charter, erecting his lands into The family suffered severely for their the free barony of Inveryn. adherence to Charles L LoGiE. long prevalent error as to the bearing of this family has David IL married, been corrected by the present Lyon King of Arms. in 1363, as his second wife, Margaret, commonly called Logic, but whose real name was Drummond, widow of Sir John Logic, and the three bars wavy on her seal have been given as the arms of Logie, being really the Sir James Balfour supplied the tinctures (? on what coat of Drummond. and or. sable authority) The other coat on the seal of Queen Margaret, and which must be that of her first husband, is a fess charged, which, although differing from the Logie coat here given, may be another assigned by Porteus and Pont to the name of Lockie argent, on a fess sable three roses of the field. The queen's son, John Logie of that Ilk, is represented by the Earl of Errol. seal of Thomas Logie, 1467, is two chevronels, and in base a lion's In Aberdeenshire there were Logics of Boddam, of whom Peter, a face. coat—sable, younger son, had, in 1734, a grant of the altered Drummond of Also Logics Loanhead, the first three bars wavy within a bordure or. of whom, George, had a charter of that property a.d. 1600. Mary, heiress of Loanhead, married William Wemyss of Craighall, and her son sold The heir-male, George, consul of the King of Sweden the estate
—
A
—
A
1771. at Algiers, was father of Lieutenant
Logie, R.N.,
who
unsuccessfully
claimed Loanhead. Captain John Logie was beheaded along with Sir for Queensferry John Gordon of Haddo 1644. George sat in parliament 1648.
t.-
,
Porteus gives for Logie of Logical mond, gules, three chevronels sable three roses gules. argent also argent, two chevronels Gartshore. This coat is given by Pont, but seems to have been of that Ilk a cadet registered 1672-78— entirely altered, for Alexander with four holly leaves vert crest—an eagle argent, a saltire cantonned ;
;
renew
my age. displayed proper ; motto, The same quartered with Stirling was recorded in 1818 by Alexander as male representative of the Gartshore-Stirling of Craigbarnet, who, I
SUNDRIES.
4o8
Gartshores, was allowed supporters, two eagles with wings expanded Gartshore, in the county of Dumbarton, was repurchased byproper. Alexander, merchant in Glasgow, a cadet of the family, and entailed in His descendant, John Gartshore of Gartshore, died in December 1694. was succeeded by his sister Marjory. The estate was afterwards and 1805, inherited by a descendant through females, John, younger son of Sir Patrick Murray of Ochtertyre, Bart., who assumed the surname of Gartshore, and is now of Ravelston, near Edinburgh, having sold the old The elder line, seated at Alderston and Craigbarnet, family property. seems to be extinct one of its cadets was William Gartshore of Rusko, M.P., a Lord of the Admiralty, who d.s.p. 1806. ;
MoNORGEN.
Porteus gives
—azure,
An
a lion rampant between two
old family taking its name from lands in Norin de Monorgund married Forveleth, daughter and coPerthshire. heir of Finlay de Campsi, son of Robert de Redheuch. Gilbert de Monlived of Robert II. in the William sat in parliament early reign orgrund that sold the Gilbert of and was dead in 1648, Ilk, 1638, estate, 1471-88. when his son James was a prisoner charged with killing Thomas Jackson of Carsegrange. Rerik. Balfour makes the heads erased. Mr Gilbert Rerik sat in parliament 1467 and afterwards. The surname is taken from a parish and barony in Kirkcudbrightfleurs-de-lis in chief or.
shire.
M'GACHAN OF Daquhat. Balfour and Porteus make the field or. Roland MacGahen, of the county of Wigton, swore fealty to Edward I. 1296; in 1377 Morice M'Gaychyn and others had an English safeconduct at the request of Archibald Douglas, lord of Galloway. 1494 Archibald M'Gaudine of Bardilzennoch Dalquhat, long the seat of the family, was sold by Robert M'Gachan, Captain Twenty-first Royal Scots his son Robert, accountant of excise in Scotland, Fusiliers, about 1750 ;
;
left issue.
M'Blane.
These arms are given by Balfour and Porteus with the the former substituting a cross patde for the rose, but were not registered till 1809, when they were allowed as in Porteus' MS., with supporters, a lion gules and a griffin proper, to Andrew Blane of Blanehis grandnephew, field, Ayrshire, writer to the signet, who d.s.p. 1839 Robert Arthur Blane, Captain Twenty-second Regiment of Foot, represents the family. Sir Gilbert, baronet, physician in ordinary to King George IV., had a grant of an augmentation 18 12, an anchor sable entwined by a serpent fess sable,
;
proper in chief.
The surname M'Blane belongs
to the shires of Ayr and Wigton, and in the treasurer's accounts for appears 1473; Thomas Blane 1499 John M'Blaine 1500; in 1649, 3000 merks were paid to the widow and children ;
of Captain M'Blean, who had been killed in the public service Captain Patrick Blaine of Wig died before 1665. The principal family of the name, besides Blanefield, possessed Grougar, Barbae, Dalduff, and Brounston in Ayrshire. The Mac seems to have been dropped early in the eighteenth century, as in 1724 William Blain of Enoch was served heir of his uncle Thomas M'Blain alias Blain who died in September 17 17 in the lands of Brounstoun. M'HAN. This is in Font's MS., and another variation is also given ;
—
^azure,
a chevron between two
trefoils argent.
SUNDRIES,
409
John Mauchan, bailie of EdinAlexander burgh, parliament 1528 Mauchane, advocate, sheriff-depute of the county of Edinburgh, acquired Over Barnton 1558 he left a son, Mr George of Over Barnton, who d.s.p., and a daughter, who married Carkettill, Agnes, George merchant, burgess of Edinburgh. In 1582 Thomas, third son of Edward Mauchan, burgess of Edinburgh, was served heir of entail of his second cousin, Mr George, in the lands of Over Barnton. Malcolm. Porteus gives argent, on a saltire between four bucks' heads erased sable as many stars of the first. John Malcolm was chamberlain of for Fife 21st life, appointed July 1641, was afterwards of the and a sheriff-depute county, acquired great estate, including the baronies of Balbeadie and Inchgaw or Lochore; he married Margaret, daughter of Sir Michael Arnot of Arnot, and died 8th February 1692, aged eighty-one. His eldest son, Sir John of Innerteil, had been created a baronet 25th July 1665, and this title, with the estates of Balbeadie, entailed in 1720, and Grange, entailed 1724, remain with the family. Lochore was sold c. 1780. Alexander, third son of the founder of the family, was a Senator of the College of Justice, with the title of Lord Lochore, and a member of the Privy Council, but was deprived of his offices and imprisoned 1689; he died ist September 1692, aged forty-two. David Malcolm, a native of Fife, was great-grandfather of General Sir John, G.C.B., and his brothers Sir Pulteney and Sir James arms granted 1815 or, on a saltire azure between four harts' heads erased gules five crescents of the field, with differences. this family claims as Malcolm, formerly M'Callum of Poltalloch ancestor Ronald Malcolmson of Cragynis, who, in 1412, had a grant from " his kinsman," Colin Campbell of Lochaw, of Barrelbrachan, Corwarran, Gartacharran, and other lands this was confirmed in 14 14, with the proviso that, should Ronald or his heirs rebuild the Castle of Cragynis (Craignish), In 1447 Duncan, they should be constables of it under the Campbells. Lord Campbell, granted to Ronald Malcolmson of Craginche and Corbarran, the offices of steward tosachdor and mair of Craginche. John Machane, notary sat
public, 1477
in
;
;
Mr
;
—
;
;
;
These persons are also claimed as ancestors by the Campbells of Craignish, and it is certain that Craignish and Corbarran descended to owners who took the name of Campbell or M'Coull, and were known, as the Clandowil Craignish. Poltalloch seems to have belonged to MacCallums before 1600 it is in the parish of Kilmartin, of which Mr Gilbert Makelchallum or Malcolmsoun, was chaplain 1546, and rector of Craginche 1542-61. Dugald Malcolm of Pell River estate, Jamaica, eldest son of Alexander Malcolm or MacCallum of Poltalloch, registered arms in 1773 argent, on a saltire azure between four bucks' heads couped gules five stars or; crest a motto " In ardua tendit." He Corinthian pillar and pedestal argent in Poltalloch by his cousin-german, Neill Mald.s.p., and was succeeded colm of Retreive estate in Jamaica, who had also registered arms in 1773, with a galley instead of the star on the centre of the saltire; crest— a tower son and successor of the last, argent masoned sable. Neill of Poltalloch, he was allowed supporterswhen in arms named Neill, recorded 1818, two stags at gaze proper collared and with chains reflexed over their backs or he retained his father's crest, but resumed the fifth star. ;
—
;
—
—
;
John Malcolm was Ross Herald 1630-46
;
William was Bute Pur-
SUNDRIES.
41 o
suivant 1647 ; and William was appointed Unicorn Pursuivant at the Restoration, but deprived 1682 for non-conformity. Macaulay. Arms registered 1672-78 by George M'Alla, merchant in Edinburgh, descended of the family of Ardincaple gules, two arrows in saltire argent surmounted of a fess checquy of the second and first between three buckles or, a bordure indented of the last crest a boot couped at the ankle, thereon a spur all proper motto '^Dulce pericuhmi." This coat is probably a combination of the pheon, the old Macaulay bearing, converted into arrows, with the fess checquy and buckles of the Stewarts, Earls and Dukes of Lennox, of whom Ardincaple was held. It is generally stated that this family are identical with the Ardincaples of
—
;
—
—
;
that Ilk.
Morice de Arncappil, in 1296, did homage to Edward I. Arthur de Ardinkapel witnessed a charter of Malcolm, Earl of Lennox Morice of Ardenagappil was alive 5th April 1406, when his son and apparent heir Arthur granted a bond of manrent to Duncan, Earl of Lennox. To this document, he having no seal of his own, appended that of Humphrey Colquhoun of Luss. Alexander Ardincaple of that Ilk was living in 151 1, and in 1541 Alexander M'Caulaw of Ardincaple. How did the change of name come about? Irving, in the " History of Dumbartonshire," says that this first Macaulay was son of an Aulay de Ardincaple, and omits Alexander of that Ilk altogether. He also says that Aulay had a brother " who may possibly have been the first of the Macaulays of John, 1527, Arden." Why the children of John should call themselves Macaulay is ;
;
not explained. Alwyn, second Earl of Lennox, 1225, had a younger son, Auleth Amelech or Hamelyn, who left descendants.
Iwur
M 'Aulay
of Dumbartonshire is mentioned in the Exchequer mentions that in 1524 the laird of Ardincaple granted Rolls, 1326. Irving a wadset to John Macaulay and his wife. As already stated, Alexander M'Caulaw possessed Ardincaple 1541 ;
Walter M'Cawlay of Ardincaple 1564. Aulay Macaulay represented the county in parliament 1608, was knighted about 16 14, and had a charter of his lands in favour of himself and a long series of heirs. In 1591 he signed a bond of clanship with Alister Macgregor of Glenstrae, whom he acknowledged as his chief, promising to pay him calp, admitting that the Macaulays were cadets of the Macgregor clan. Sir Aulay followed James VI. to London, and d.s.p. 1617. In the Acts of Parliament 1587 there is mention of broken men on the lands of Laird M'Cawla of Ardincaple, and in 1594 of lawless persons named Macalis. Sir Aulay himself was accused of complicity with the Macgregors, but was protected by the Duke of Lennox, whose vassal he was. After 1700 the family began to decline ; their estates were gradually sold, and Aulay, the last laird, is said to have died in absolute want at Laggarie. His nephew and heir, James Donaldson of Bannachra, registered arms 1766, quartering his mother's coat, from which the buckles are omitted, but a bordure azure charged with eight buckles or surrounds the whole. Darleith, in Dumbartonshire, was in the fifteenth century possessed by Ardincaples John Ardincaple of Darleith, 1490, John Darleith This looks like the reverse of the change said to have of that Ilk, 15 10.
—
SUNDRIES.
411
been made by the Ardincaples of that Ilk, the elder branch dropping the surname of locality, the younger taking a surname from their lands. Aulay Macaulay, of a family long resident in Lewes, who graduated at the University of Edinburgh 1693, and was minister first of Tiree and Coll, afterwards of Harris, was ancestor of Thomas Babington Lord Macaulay his lordship's arms were, gules, two arrows in saltire points ;
downwards argent surmounted by
as many barrulets compony or and azure between two buckles in pale of the third, a bordure engrailed also of the third crest, upon a rock, a boot proper thereon a spur or motto, as before supporters, two herons proper. The arms of M'Callain W. include a pheon or arrow head as a charge. This, in an addition to Porteus, is said to be for Macaulay of Ardincaple. Porteus gives for M'Calla, gules, two stars argent, and a pheon pendent or, which is nearer in tinctures to Macaulay. The modern arms of M'Call are founded on Macaulay, and the coat of Macadam, gules, a fess checquy or and azure between three arrows of the second resembles that of Macaulay. In Dumfriesshire there were M'Caulls designed of that Ilk, of Auchenchean, of Guffokland, of Grenane. In 1610 Alexander M'Aula had a grant of the manor of Ballyreagh, in Ulster. At the time of Pynnar's survey, 1618, he is designed M'Awiey alias Stewart, which is somewhat remarkable, taken in conjunction with the resemblance of the coats of these two families. Murdoch. Arms registered, 1672-78, by Patrick of Cumlodden in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright argent, two ravens hanging paleways sable, with an arrow through both their heads fessways proper ; crest a raven rising sable, having an arrow shot through his breast gules, ;
;
;
—
headed and feathered argent
;
—
motto
—
"
Omnia pro
bono."
In 1791 this coat was recorded for Charles, daughter and coheir of Thomas Murdoch of Cumlodden, wife of John Tait of Harvieston, Mr Tait was allowed as crest a raven rising sable, writer to the signet in bend sinister proper; motto — "/Vt? Brussio et arrow with an pierced patria." This is allusive to a tradition that the family descended from a lad named Murdoch, who volunteered to serve Robert Bruce, and showed his skill in archery by bringing down with one arrow two ravens on the
—
;
wing. In 1795
Mr
Tait again registered arms, dropping the Murdoch crest, " " Pro rege et patria ; crest a hand holding to The present Archbishop of CanterVirtuti'''' above it. a dagger, with bury is grandson of Mrs Tait nde Murdoch. Walter Murdac or Murdach witnessed two charters of William the Lyon in or before 1200; Johan Murthac, of the county of Dumfries,
—
and altering the motto '•'
Edward
Cumlodden was long
the seat of the but the of that Ilk, early records of designed family, from Patrick of that Ilk Thomas of their descent are wanting. 1528 Cumlodden, 1583, the descent is clear his son Patrick is styled of that Ilk 1615; Patrick of Cumlodden was forfeited in 1681, and restored in his son Thomas who sue. him 17th October 1709, sold the estate,
swore
fealty to
I.
1296.
who were sometimes
;
;
1690;
and left daughters— Mrs Tait Hannah Anne, married 1750, Roderick Mackenzie of Redcastle also (?) Euphemia, married John Chalmer of Fingland, and Barbara, married Hamilton of Kipp. Sir Thomas William Clinton Murdoch, K.C.M.G., is said to descend from a younger son. ;
;
5M
SUNDRIES.
412 MiRRIE.
BalfouF and Porteus
make
the chevron sable, and the two charges in the upper part trefoils slipped the head that of a moor proper or sable. Mr Thomas Macalzean, advocate, burgess of Edinburgh, acquired Cliftonhall, was provost of Edinburgh 1561, Senator of the College of Justice 1570, sat in parliament and on commissions 1563-7-8, and died in June 1 581. His only child, Euphemia, married Patrick Moscrop (son and heir of Mr John Moscrop of Cassilton, advocate, who died in January 1599, by Katherine Little, his wife, of the Liberton family), who assumed the surname of Macalzean during the lifetime of his father-inlaw, but dropped it after the death of his wife. Lady Cliftonhall, as she was called, was burnt on the Castlehill of Edinburgh, and her property she forfeited, for witchcraft and conspiracy against the life of the King is said to have practised against the lives of her husband, her father-inlaw% her cousin Lilias Macalzean, and others. Cliftonhall was granted to Sir James Sandilands, but an act in 1592, restored the other property of their mother to Martha, Elizabeth, and
M'ALLEANE.
;
;
Euphemia Macalzeans. The eldest married Mr David Ogilvy
of Pitmowies, and left two became the wife of and youngest Henry Sinclair of Whytekirk. daughters,
Mr Henry
Macalzean, advocate, justice-depute in 1581, the heir-male of Lord Cliftonhall, left a son, Thomas, father of William, 1622.
The coats of Hadden and Bertram are from a manuscript in the British Museum among the Harleian miscellaneous collections ; it seems to belong to the latter part of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. Hadden differs entirely from Haldane of that Ilk and Haldane of Gleneagles, and
is
not registered.
Bertram. Arms registered, 1752, by Archibald of Nisbet, co. Lanark ^gules, on an escutcheon or between eight crosses patde argent
—
—
an anvil proper a ram's head proper, issuing from an antique crest crown or motto " ye avance." This is one of the names on the Roll of Battle Abbey. The Bertrand of Normandy bore or, a lion rampant vert armed langued and crowned argent in Charles' Roll is Robert Bertram or, a lion rampant
—
;
;
—
—
;
vert.
The orle, sometimes an inescutcheon, however, was the bearing of the two great Northumbrian families of the name. The Bertrams of Mitford were barons by tenure in the reign of Henry L Roger was summoned to parliament as a baron 1264, and his son Roger died without male issue From the time of Henry H. till the death of Robert in 1364, leav131 1. a ing daughter and heiress, Bothall was held as a barony by the Bertrams. Glover and Charles both give for Roger Bertram gules, crusilly an orle or the latter has also Sir Robert of Northumberland or, an orle ;
—
;
—
azure.
In 1296 Johan Bertram, burgess of Inverkeithing did homage to I. George was a member of the committee of parliament on
Edward
SUNDRIES. complaints
1466,
and William, next
413
year, represented
the
burgh of
Walter Bertram, burgess of Edinburgh, was a conspicuous person was provost 1481-2-94 ambassador to France, 1482 sat in parliament ;
;
;
married Elizabeth Cant, and had a tack for the lives of himand spouse, and of the survivor, of the lands of Little Monkton CO. Edmburgh. He founded two chaplainries in the church of St Giles 1478-94, and m one of the charters the lands of Laurence Bertram are mentioned as marching with Walter's, to the other Andrew Bertram 1478-91
;
self
baihe of Edinburgh, is a witness. The Spanish ambassadors stayed in the house of Walter Bertram, who was dead in 1498. Thomas possessed property in Edinburgh 1529, and in 1562 Sir Andrew was presented to the chaplainry of St Blaise in the parish church. Part of Nisbet in Lanarkshire was possessed by the Bertrams in the sixteenth century, and Kersewall was purchased at the beginning of the eighteenth. The family has intermarried with Menzies of Culterallers, Hamilton of Eldershaw, Kennedy of Auchtyfardle, Hay of Haystoun', Porterfield of Fulwood, Brown of Cultermains, Lockhart of Carstairs, Lockhart of Cleghorn, &c., and is represented by William Bertram of Nisbet and Kersewall.
Glasfurd. These arms are copied from an original birth-brief in favour of John Glasfurd, master of arts, then resident at Saumur, son of Patrick Glasfurd of Walltour, co. Fife. It is dated 12th June 1610, and the possession of Colonel Glasfurd, the present representative of the family. The motto is '' Mente et manur The surname is taken from a barony and parish in Lanarkshire. Sir Alan de Glasfurd witnessed a charter of Sir Herbert de Maxwell, c. 1280. Rogier de Glasford or Glasfrithe of the county of Lanark, and Aleyn his is. in
son swore fealty to Edward L in 1296. Sir Alan de Glasfurth witnessed a charter of Alan the High Steward, c. 1317. In 1330 Robert the High Steward granted licence to Sir Alan Stewart to purchase Crukysfee in his barony of Renfrew from Adam de Glasfreth. Thomas de Glasfrith is mentioned in the Exchequer William deGlasfryth, rolls 1340 as chamberlain or deputy chamberlain. about 1 37 1, witnessed a charter of Robert, Earl of Strathern. About this time Glassford passed from its original owners, and in 1375 there is a Crown charter of confirmation in favour of John Sempill, whose descendants long retained possession. In 1685, when Francis Abercromby, husband of Anne, Baroness Sempill, was created a peer, he took the title of Lord Glassford.
Persons of the name, early in the fifteenth century, had repeatedly safe conducts to visit England along with the Hamiltons, in whose service they were. To the Fifeshire branch belonged John, who sat in parliament for the burgh of Cupar 1649-50, and Andrew, who represented the same burgh
1685-86. his
John Glasfurd, collector of customs at Borrowstounness, registered arms 1672-78, when a slight alteration was made on the coat. His
SUNDRIES,
414
great-grandson Duncan acquired the estate of Shirgarton, in Stirlingshire, by marriage with Mary, sister and heir of James Ure of that place. Their son Duncan of Tillicoultry, was father of John, Major-General of the Bengal Engineer Corps, whose son, Charles Lament Robertson Glasfurd, Colonel of the Bombay Staff Corps, in 1876 again registered the family arms argent, a bend engrailed between two spur rowels in chief gules and a bugle horn in base of the second stringed and garnished motto, as before. Porteus, in 1660, gives for sable; crest, a bugle horn between two mullets gules. a bend Glasford, argent, engrailed ;
;
Kelso of Kelsoland.
From
a sketch in Porteus's manuscript; Balfour has, sable, a fess argent between three garbs or. The arms of this family are not recorded, although said by Nisbet to have been confirmed in 1636. Huwe de Kelshou of Ayrshire swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296, and no doubt was ancestor of the family seated at Kelsoland. This estate was sold, repurchased, and again sold in 167 1 the Kelsos of Dankeith claimed the representation. The surname is probably taken from Kelso, in Roxburghshire. Richard de Kelchou witnessed a charter of Helen, daughter of Alan Lord of Galloway, Constable of Scotland, wife of Roger de Quincy, Constable of Scotland, in favour of the Bishop of Glasgow, 1233. Humphrey de Kalchou witnessed a resignation by Alan de Sarcino, in favour of the church of St Mary of Kelso in 1260 at Kelso. ;
Orme.
From
a drawing by Sir James Balfour in his manuscript " Orme of Mugdrome in Ao. 1569." This collection of blazons, for
surname belongs to Fifeshire, particularly to the neighbourhood of Newburgh and Lindores Abbey. Stephen Orme was procurator to the Abbot in 1502; George, son of Stephen deceased, had charters of Mugdrum and Easter Cluny 1520; his grandson, James, died without issue, and his sisters, Helen and Catherine who married George Clephane of Carslogie, were his heirs in 1581. Their uncle, the heir male, David of Mugdrum and Priorletham, was with his sons, Mr David and Mr Allan, concerned in the treason of the Earl of Bothwell they were outlawed in 1588, and Allan was hanged Francis, son of Mr David, had a charter of 17th September 1594. novodamus 1631 Stephen of Mugdrum and Hallhill, was father of who was heir in 1648, and sold the estate. served George David Orme of Balvaird, probably of the same family, was father of Alexander of Balvaird, who left two sons Alexander, writer to the signet, and a principal clerk of Session, acquired the superiority of Mugdrum, and d.s.p. in January 1789 and David of Lamorbey in Kent, a physician in London, whose only child, Mary Anne, married in 1797, Neill Malcolm ;
;
—
;
of Poltalloch, CO. Argyll. The arms, as confirmed to
him
in 18 18, to be
borne in an escutcheon
SUNDRIES.
415
—
of pretence, are or, two chevronels gules, between two buckles fessways in chief and a bugle horn in base azure stringed of the second.
From the original patent in favour of Alexander Bower of 20th March 1668 no crest or motto. Kincaldrum, Patrick of Kinnettles registered arms, 1672-78 vert, two bows in full bend paleways or stringed argent between three sheaves of arrows of the second no crest motto " fnetam" Bower.
—
;
;
;
—
Ad
This surname appears
chiefly in Forfarshire, and was borne by of Arbroath, one of them John Bouer 1387, and by rich burgesses of Dundee. Alexander represented Dundee in parliament 1650. Alexander of Innerichtie, was father of James, whose daughter and heir, In 1659 Alexander, fiar of Kincreich, was Grizel, married Andrew Gray. served heir of provision of George Gordon of Kincaldrum his descendants intermarried with Sinclair of Roslin, Graham of Fintry, &c. ; Graham Bower sold Kincaldrum, and left a son, Alexander Bower-St The KinClair, Esq., claiming to be heir-general of Sinclair of Roslin. nettles family was also descended from burgesses of Dundee. Walter Bower, the chronicler, was abbot of St Colme laird Bower figured in connection with Logan of Restalrig, in the Gowrie plot ; Thomas was forfeited in 1479 for holding Dunbar Castle, and ten years later Patrick had a remission for holding Dumbarton Castle against the
several
monks
;
;
king.
Balcanquell of that Ilk. From a collection of Armes in the Lyon Office, made 1640-45 by Vallentyn Jenkins, an Englishman, and purchased in 1654 for forty shillings by Joseph Stacie, herald painter and Ross Herald. The surname is taken from lands in the parish of Strathmiglo in Fife, which were sold by James Balcanqual of that Ilk, towards the end of the eighteenth century. He left two surviving children, Robert George, who d.s.p., and Margaret Hay, who married, in 1794, the Rev.
James
Hall, minister of Lesmahago. one of the ministers of Edinburgh, a younger son of the
Mr Walter,
married Margaret, daughter of James Marjoribanks, merchant burgess of Edinburgh, and had, with other issue, Dr Walter, chaplain to James VI., Master of the Savoy, and Dean of Durham, one of the executors of George Heriot, whose wife, Christian Marjoribanks, was his laird,
cousin.
the original patent, dated 21st June 1633, by Sir " worthie James Balfour, Lyon King of Arms, in favour of ane right one of and his Matie's Roabes, gentleman, George Kirke, Esq., Master of The original is in the College of Arms, and his Matie's bedchamer." 5 N
Kirke.
From
SUNDRIES,
41 6
Tucker, Somerset, has kindly favoured me with an exact copy it a grant of crest and motto to be borne with his arms by the patentee. The seal of Alexander Kirk, bailie of St Andrews, 1520, has a
Mr is
;
and
and
base a cinquefoil. 1680 by James Kirke, merchant in Edinburgh, registered on a saltire argent a thistle slipped vert on a chief of the second gules, " l^otis et conathree cushions azure; crest, a temple proper; motto mine'' The arms are evidently founded on those of Kirkpatrick. Nisbet gives the arms and pedigree of a family of Kirk, which gave birth to several clergymen, a writer to the signet, and intermarried with Campbell of Mochaster, and other good families. The arms closely resemble those of the master of the robes. To this branch belonged Mr Robert Kirk, minister of Dornoch, who married in 1747 Jane, sister of George Ross, first of Cromarty. Their daughter Jane, wife of Captain Duncan Munro of Culcairn, was mother of the late Mrs Catherine RoseRoss of Cromarty and Culcairn. In 1479 Gawin of Kirk was a party to a suit as to the lands of Hoddam. In Dumfries and Kirkcudbrightshires there were families of Kirko, Kirkaugh, or Kirk. They intermarried with Grierson of Barjarg, M'Naught of Culfad, &c. Elizabeth, heiress of Sundaywell, married a Maclellan, and died in 17 12, leaving issue seated there. Glaister, Bogrie, and Chapel were also possessed by families named Kirk. saltire
Arms
chief,
in
c.
—
EcHLiN OF PiTTADRO.
From
the Funeral Escutcheon of Mary died in March 1731 without Oliphant, Countess of Strathmore, issue; her ladyship's paternal grandmother Giles Echlin, wife of William Oliphant, bailie of the regality of Dunfermline, was a daughter of the Pittadro family. Her father, Dr Charles Oliphant, was second son of Charles of Lanton, a principal clerk of Session, and there seems to have been some difficulty in arranging the seize quartiers to please the Strathmore family without too serious a deviation from truth. They were Oliphant of Turin, Colville of Cleish, Echlin of Pittadro, Kinloch of Alderston, Halliday of Tulliebole, Scott of Clerkington, Pringle of Torsonce, Young of Leny, Houstoun of that Ilk, Primrose, Lord Clerk Register, Lawson of Boghall, Hope of Craighall, Bennet of Wallyford, Rae of Kilspindie (rather Pitsindie), and Morison of Preston" Peter Oliphant's father grange. Two notes show the changes made: married Sandilands of Torphichen's daughter, and would have it on the escutcheon in place of Abigail Haliday." " This Young of Lennie's father is said to have married Scrimsor of Didop, constable of Dundee, his daughter, and would have it on the escutcheon in place of Bennet." Thus in each instance going a generation too far back, and bringing in a nobler coat to the exclusion of that borne by an ancestor in the In proper degree. The surname is taken from lands near Dalmeny. 1296 Rauf Eghlyn of the county of Edinburgh, Robert de Eghlyn, tenant of the king in the same county, and Rauf Deghlyn of Haddington, tenant of the king in the county of Edinburgh, swore fealty to Edward I. The lands passed into the hands of Dundas of that Ilk before 1452, and were
who
SUNDRIES.
417
erected into a barony 1669. In or before 1407 John de Echlyne, vicar of Kinneff, resigned his lands of Milnflat and Wecton in Lothian. Pittadro, near Inverkeithing, opposite Echlin, on the north side of the Forth, was the property of William Echling in 1457 his descendants intermarried with Melville of Raith, Colville of Cleish, Henderson of Fordell, and ;
other good families. Sir James Balfour mentions that in July 1649, the lady of Pittadro, a sister of Henderson of Fordell was committed to the Tolbooth of Edinburgh, charged with witchcraft that in the middle of December, before trial, she was found dead in the morning, apparently poisoned, having been quite well the night before. It was thought that she had either taken poison herself, or that it had been administered by her relatives' desire, as, if she had been pub" had blotted and stained these families shoe was descendit licly burnt, it off, of quhom wer descendit maney religious worschipfull and vorthey Pittadro was acquired by Henderson of Fordell, and the personages." name has disappeared in Scotland. Robert, a son of the laird of Pittadro, was Bishop of Down and Connor 1613-35, ^"^ founded several families, on one of which a baronetcy of Ireland was conferred in 1721. Ardquin, in co. Down, the seat of the bishop remains the property of his representative, who bears the coat with ;
some
variations.
Douglas of Pompherstoun.
From
the Earl of Kinnoull's
Porteus makes the fess a chief with two fillets on a chief azure three mullets and this is
;
MS.
Henry Frazer has ermine,
cut, c. 1655, on a stone at Lauriston Castle, near Edinburgh, as the arms of Jean, daughter of Joseph of Pompherstoun, co. Linlithgow, impaled with those of her husband, Mr Robert Dalgleish of Lauriston, solicitor to Charles II. Robert Douglas of Pompherstoun married a lady of the Marjoribanks ;
family, and had Joseph of Pompherstoun, married, 1574, Mary, daughter of John Sandilands of Calder, by Joanna, daughter of Lord Fleming their son, William of Pompherstoun, married Mary, relict of James Lord Torphichen, daughter and heir of Gilbert Lord Somerville, and had, Sir Joseph of Pompherstoun, Lieutenant-Colonel of Foot, drowned in 1682. His half-brother (?), James of Pompherstoun, whose mother, according to a Funeral Escutcheon, was a daughter of Ewart of Bodspeck, d.s.p. His eldest sister married Mr in or before 1697, and the estate was sold. Patrick Darg, minister of Fordyce, and left an only child, Elizabeth Darg; the others were Margaret, Janet, and Isobel. The family also intermarried with Lord Halyburton, Riddell of that Ilk, Stewart of Garlies, &c. ;
Hamilton of Innerwick. From
Valentine Jenkins' collection.
Thq
original coat of Hamilton was three cinquefoils. This, the oldest cadet branch, was founded by John, younger son of Walter Fitzgilbert, called Hamilton ; his seal, in 1367, was a chevron between three cinquefoils.
SUNDRIES.
41 8
John married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Alan Stewart of Cruikstoun, and they had a charter from her brother of Ballencrieff and other lands, which was confirmed by John Stewart, Earl of Carrick, 1369. It has been stated that this John had another wife, the daughter and heir of Roger de Glay of Innerwick, or that his son or other descendant acquired Innerwick by marriage with a de Glay, and in consequence added a buckle or buckles to his arms. I have failed to find evidence of this alliance, or that a de Glay ever possessed Innerwick, or bore buckles. Sir Alexander of Innerwick, son of John, married Elizabeth, daughter and The Stewarts did carry coheir of Thomas Stewart, Earl of Angus. has been shown, had a as and as the founder of the buckles, family, not necessary to look for another marriage to account for the adoption of that charge, and also of the fess checquy to commemorate the coheirship to the Earldom of Angus. The MSS. vary much some give for Innerwick a chevron argent charged with five buckles azure, and this was borne by Thomas of Priestthe Earl in 1609, being then field, father of the first Earl of Haddington Sir Thomas Hamilton, sealed with a chevron charged with one buckle between three cinquefoils as Lord Binning, in 1616, he had the addition of a bordure charged with eight thistles, and used the crest, motto and supporters still borne. When created Earl of Melrose, a coat of augmentation was granted, and two ermine spots were added on the chevron. The seal of Alexander, fiar of Innerwick 1539, is a buckle between three cinquefoils, but in 1588 Alexander of Innerwick used a fess checquy removed between three cinquefoils, two in chief and one in dexter base, and a buckle in sinister base. Some MSS. have a fess checquy between three cinquefoils others add to this a buckle in chief; others have the fess removed, with the same charges as the last. The coat latterly borne, but not registered, was gules, a fess checquy argent and azure between three cinquefoils ermine, a bordure of the last charged with eight buckles of the third. On 20th July 1687 Gavin Hamilton, " ane elder brother son" of the house of Binning, renounced the simple coat of the family in favour of " whose father was a lawful son of the house," George, then of Binning, and they were matriculated for him gules, on a chevron between three cinquefoils argent a buckle azure between two ermine spots, a bordure of the second charged with eight trefoils slipped vert. The crest and motto, however, seem to be indicative of the prosperity of the cadet the trunk " of an oak-tree sprouting out a new twig. Through God revived." To the genealogy of the Innerwick family in Anderson's " House of Hamilton," the following additions may be made VI. 2 James and 3 Lancelot were vicars of Kiltearn. VII. Was dead in March 1578-9. VIII. Is shown in a Funeral Escutcheon to have married a daughter of Home of Wedderburn. Claud, his second son,wasof Creichnes,in the parish of Innerwick, and had a grant, 23rd July 1610, of the manor of Clonyn or Taghleagh in Ulster, married Jane (Lauder), and was dead in 1618, his widow married Sir Arthur Forbes, baronet. Francis had a charter, 30th September 1628, of the barony of Killach in Nova Scotia, with the dignity of a baronet to him and his heirs-male; had a re-grant of his lands in Ireland, erected into the manor of Castle Kaylaghe or Killauch, 17th June 1630 was served heir of his father, Claud, in the lands of Creich-
dowry of land with
his wife,
it
is
;
;
;
;
—
;
—
;
SUNDRIES.
419
January 1640 was afterwards styled of Castle Hamilton, died about 1665, and his son, Sir Charles of Castle Hamilton, was served heirnes, 7th
general, 7th
;
November
1674.
IX. Divorced his first wife, Margaret Whitelaw he was alive in 1620; had a grant of lands in Ireland 1610; had another son, Mr Andrew. XII. Alexander married Isabel, daughter of James Shaw of Knockhill, and their second son, James, went to France and married a French ;
woman. Sir Alexander, XL, was the last possessor of Innerwick, but the designation was retained by the family as late as the end of the eighteenth century. XI. Andrew of Redhall married Janet, daughter of Sir Alexander Hay of Fosterseat, and died before 1679. Redhall was sold in 1672. XII. James of Ballencrieff died in Edinburgh, 21st February 1687, and was interred in the Abbey Church. XIV. The following notices do not appear in the printed pedigree, or disagree with its statements. January 1752, Hamilton, nephew of the Marquess of Lothian, married Miss Lambert, Argyll Buildings, with Died at Chatham, 12th April 1798, John, eldest son of the _;;^20,ooo. late Alexander Hamilton of Innerwick. The descent of the Earls of Haddington, from Innerwick, has been stated in several different ways, and denied altogether, but there seems no doubt of the fact, although the precise line is unproved. The heraldic evidence is favourable, and Alexander of Innerwick is called one of the nearest of kin on the father's side of the family of Thomas of Priestfield.
Greyme of the Mote.
These arms were granted, loth December William i553> by Harvey, Norroy, to Fergus Greyme "of the Mote of true and faithLydsdale (? Liddell) in Cumberland, in consideration of Some of his full service" in the reigns of Henry VIII. and Edward VI. descendants settled in Ireland, and the patent was recorded in the office of Ulster King of Arms in 1648. Sir Bernard Burke, Ulster, has kindly given me a facsimile, and to Sir Albert Woods, Garter, I am indebted for copies of the early entries regarding the Grahams in England. Much uncertainty surrounds the history of the Grahams on the borders, and the arms of 1553 are a new grant; the boar's head is the The Lyon of Graham (see p. 44). only charge that belongs to the name Robert Graham of a Graham in the south, Register contains only one entry of Newark, late provost of Dumfries, 1672-78— or, on a chief sable three a boars head erased of the second. escallops of the first, and in base At the visitation of Cumberland, 1665, there were entered the pedigree and arms of George Graham of Nunnery, aged seventy-two, grandson of Graham of Rosetrees, in that Fergus of Nunnery, a younger brother of first and fourth, or, shire, who was probably born about 1525. Quarterly, on a chief sable three escallops of the field second and third, Stewart with a chevronel gules in chief for Menteith, all within a bordure en;
grailed.
Another entry
at the
same time was made 50
for Sir Richard, third
SUNDRIES.
420
baronet of Netherby ; the same arms, the tincture of the bordure being azure, and a crescent being added in the centre for difference crest, two " Reason contents me." These bearings had wings addorsed or motto been allowed to his grandfather Richard, gentleman of His Majesty's Horse, afterwards created a baronet, on an attestation by William, Earl of Menteith, and Thomas Drysdale, Islay Herald, that he was descended " from Richard, son of John with the bright sword," second son of Malise, Earl of Menteith. In a valuable paper on The Debateable Land, by T. J. Carlyle, of Templehill, Esq., 1868, it is shown by incontestible evidence that John died without legitimate male issue; that a very old branch of the Grahams was seated first at Mosskesso or Mosskeswra, afterwards at Gillesbie, Dryfe, and Shaw in Dumfriesshire. There is a tradition that the Grahams, who make their first appearance in Cumberland, c. 1528, were of the Dryfe family. In 1602 a list of the Grahams was given in to Lord Scrope, when the chief leader was John of Moat, with 103 followers next came William of Rosetrees, with 54, the total being 439 ; but of these only 85 had the surname of Graham. When Sir Richard, third of Netherby, was created Viscount Preston, he was allowed to drop the bordure. The visitation pedigree goes no farther back than the father and mother of the first Sir Richard, Fergus Graham of Plomp, and Sibill, daughter of William Bell of Godsbrigg but a funeral entry in the Lyon Office supplies another generation, Matthew Graham of Springhill, who married Agnes Maxwell. The first Sir Richard and his brother Francis were naturalised in Scotland 1633, and in 1627 the former (then designed Richard Grahame, servitor to the Duke of Buckingham) had a crown charter of AuchinbedHis elder brother William was ridge and other lands in Dumfriesshire. murdered by the Irvings, and left an only child Catherine, who married John Armstrong of Sarke. MusHET OF THAT Ilk arms in argent, achevron gules between This coat has by an unfortunate oversight not been three ermine spots. given in facsimile as was intended. ;
—
;
;
;
;
W—
INDEX. PAGE
Abercrombie, Abernethy,
.
55,
.
27,
297 284
See Saltoun.
Adam,
.
Adinston
(Hal-
dingston), .
.
199 98 209 157, 222 145 14, 28, 195
.
Albany, Duke Alexander,
of, .
,
.
.
.
Anderson, Angus, Earl
Annand,
404
.
Aitchison,
251
227 253
.
.
Alison, Allan,
74,
.
Aiken, Aikenhead,
Aikman,
144 143
.
.
Adamson,
,
Anstruther, Arbuthnott, Ardincaple, Argyll, Earl
33, 37, 97,
of,
281 28, 194, 262 69, 135 .
129, 289
.
410
.
97, 282
of,
and resignation transfer of, see Myrton,
Arms,
Grant, 306 ; Nisbet, 389; Hamilton,4i8; Scott, 383. 254, 295 Armstrong, Arnot, 74, 245, 295 Arran, Earl of, 98 Athole, Earl of, 97 Auchinleck, 33, 62, 70, 32 1 Austin, 205
114
;
.
.
.
Aytoun,
.
17, 251,
273,295
Badges of Scotland, Baikie,
.
.
4 390
Bailleul,
.
.
3
Baillie,
.
.
73, 163
Baird, .144. Balcaskie, Balfour, 27,68, no, 186, 193, .
.
Balcanqual,
.
Baliol,
.
.
403 212 118,
305 415 3
42
2
424
INDEX. PAGE
Rerik,
,
408
.
Restalrig or Lestalrik, 1 76 Richardson, 124 Riddell, 73 ,
.
386
Rig, Rind, Rynd, 11
I,
Roberton, Robertson,
Rochead, Rogers,
243, 294
239
"5,367 396 136 309 296 217
.
Rolland,
.
Rollo,
Ronald, Ross, Rose, 19, 33, 37, 69, 75.77,96, loi, 148,284, 288 Rothes, Earl of, 98, 282 .
Rule,
.
.
Russell,
141,321 118
Rutherford. 164, 290, 368
Ruthven,
.
.
Sachy, St Michael, Saltoun, Lord, .
loi,
.
404
.
321 102
.
Sandilands, Sands, Sanquhar, Lord, . Say, .
.
173, 296
.
376 283 24
.
Scheil,
.
.
Scheres, Scotland, Kings .
Scott,
67,
Scougal, Scroggie,
309
.
141, 158 121 of, 4,
281
107, 108, 258, 295, 383
69,
.372, 404
.
262, 375 68, 137, 286, Scrymgeour, 375. 406 loi, 47, 107, 284 Sempill, Seton, 24, icx), 165, 186, .
.
223. 259, 321
Shand, Shank, Sharp,
16,
Spalding,
371
Speir, Speirs,
395 124 213, 239 375
Spens, Spittal,
,
Spott,
Spottiswoode,
218,. 321
Spreull,
128, 189
Sprottie,
375 261
,
Squire,
.
Stedman,
226, 272
Steel,
238, 321 241. 375 120, 268, 376
Stenhop, Stevenson, Stewart, Earl of Buchan, .
see
Ross
19
.
Stewart, 28, 38, 44, 67, 78, 112, 116, 269, 281, 310, 321 See Athole, Moray, Methven, Innermeath, Lennox, Albany, Ochiltree. Stirling,
^^, 80, 287, 309,
321
S trade,
.
.
Strange, Strathern,
.
.
Straton,
190,
370 297
.
234
.
Supporters, earliest in Scotland, .
known in
9 a
Supporters granted patent of baronetcy, 1 7 Supporters singular, Dalyell of Binns, 54 „ Home of Polwarth, 47 Sutherland, 31, 32, 37, 78, 99, 116, 148 Swinton, n, 295, 375 122 Swyft, .
Sydserff,
,
.112, 301
.
262 206
Syme, Symyne,
369
Symmer,
370 .
74, 161
.
375
Symington, .
PACK
Turing, Turnbull, Turner, .
107 198
St Clair, 28, 67, 180, 258, 268, 284,
Sinclair,
322 See Caithness.
323 207 Sleich, 187 Slewman, Sloan, 144 Smart, 376 Smeaton, 375 Smith, Smyth, 212, 373 .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Tait,
.
Templeton,
Thomson, Tindale,
Tod, Towers, Townis,
.
.
.
169, 411
212
.
.
149,
.
129,
.
.
.
.
.
317 310 394 67
Tweedie,
48, 267, .
.
Tyrie,
.
Udny, Udward,
Trotter,
Tulloch, Tullus, Tullydaff,
200
.
.
.
.
197, 239
.
207 406
.
.
384,
404 361 271 376
.
.
Umfrastoun, Urquhart, 57, 103, 290 Urry, 258 Vallange,
.
Vans,
III, 288,
Veitch,
Vernour, Vipont,
. .
Visitation of
Arms,
295 376 217 376 226 208
Vollum,
.
376
Waddell,
.
204 234 206, 376 387 224, 269, 293
Waddie, Walker, Walkinshaw, .
.
Wallace, 68,
Wardlaw,
67, 72, 128, 182,
266 261
Waterstoun, Watson, Watt,
234. 242
249 229 230 227 228 228
Wauchope,
Wedderbum, Weir, Wellands, . Welsh,
Wellwood,
Wemyss,
69. ^ZZ^
.
White, Whitefoord, Whitehead, Whitelaw, .
,
Wigmore, Wigoim,
378 296 208 213
160 261
254
,
. Wilkie, Williamson, Wilson,
237. 379 96, 251, 376
Winchester,
Z1^
Winram,
.
Winton,
.
122 121
99. 128
Wiseman, Wishart,
310 140
.
Wood, 69
76,
122
Traquair, Troughear, 269 144 Trollope, Troup,
248 287 202, 272 166
.
.
32
.
107, 132
Shoner, Simson,
Siward, Skene,
PAGE Somerville, loi, 282, 284,
.
Shaw,
icxD,
425
Wordie, Wright,
.
.
Yester, Lord,
Young, Younger, Yule,
107,
237.
297 379 136 99. 283
215. 311 .
124
379
ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS.
third VinG,/or 1562, reac^ 1561.
in,
Introduction,
Blackwood, page 332. The Earl of Dufferin has most obliginglysent rubbings of the arms on the tombstone of his ancestor John Blackwood, provost of Bangor, born in Scotland, who died 22nd May 1665, aged seventy-two a fess, in chief a crescent between two mullets, in base a mascle. The same coat, with a crescent for crest, appears on the monument of John Blackwood of Ballyleidy, 1720, grandson of the first John. The saltire and chief charged with three leaves were not adopted till 1800, when the peerage was conferred, and the Earl of Dufferin has reverted to the original coat of the family. BoNAR, page 296. The swords on the seal, 1586, have the points downwards and crossing one another.* Robert Elwald of Thorleshop was Eliot, page 275, footnote. in officer or March 1537, at which time Robert Johnappointed serjand stoun was captain of Hermitage. GiLMouR, page 271. Sir Charles, 1733, was third baronet of the family but only second of the second creation. KiNTORE, page 350. John and Walter, who signed the Ragman Roll in 1296, were of the county oi Perth. Lindsay, page 19, second line from the foot, for Lives of the Balcarres, read Lives of the Lindsays. " " NicoLSON, page 361. The word assumed has been used in mentioning the succession to the baronetcy created in 1700, in consequence of a mistake in an abstract of the patent obtained from the Great Seal RegisThe limitation is to the heirs male of the body of Thomas Nicolson, ter. ;
whom
failing to his heirs SwiNTON, page 38.
male whomsoever. John, who was killed at Verneuil, was son of
Sir John Lord of Mar. * Communicated by Horatius Bonar, W,S., who
is
preparing for publication a genealogical account
of the family of Bonar.
Printed by Turnbull
fr*
Spears, Edinburgh.
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